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Best of the Web: Smearing critics of Israel undermines importance of tackling genuine anti-Semitism

corbyn labour anti-semitism
Whilst the issue of Britain leaving the EU has dominated our media for the last two years, a close runner-up has been much of the media claiming the Labour Party has a major problem with anti-Semitism.

Last week an opinion poll found that whilst 36 percent of Brits think there is a problem with anti-Semitism in the Labour Party, 38 percent disagree, leaving 26 percent undecided.

In nearly 50 years as a Labour Party member I never saw a Labour MP raise a single issue of anti-Semitism until two and a half years ago when the left-wing candidate for the youth seat on Labour's National Executive Committee was accused of being linked to anti-Semitism. Weeks later an independent report revealed there was no such problem, but the smears led to the defeat of the candidate.

Comment:
hajo meyer jews anti-semitism



Pirates

UK wants more money for imaginary Russian threat while its citizens descend into poverty

London bridge war ship
The headline in the UK newspaper the Daily Mail on August 7 encapsulated much that is paranoid in sad modern Britain. It read "Russian warships pass through English Channel as Putin's armed forces ratchet up pressure on the Royal Navy."

Certainly, the United Kingdom is in a state of crisis; but it isn't because of any sort of military threat. The vote to leave the European Union was a major slide down the greasy pole of decline and Time magazine summed up the debacle by pointing out that "At heart of this political saga is the fact that the politicians leading the Brexit "Leave" campaign - Boris Johnson chief among them - never actually explained to the British public what a vote for 'Leave' entailed. The promise of Brexit was all things to all people, which is how it managed its 52- to 48-percent victory over the 'Remain' side. Then prime minister David Cameron resigned, and it fell to his successor Theresa May to figure out what Brexit actually means."

The Brexit pantomime is taking place in an era in which it is recorded that "As benefits are cut and rents soar, Britain has seen a staggering rise in homelessness: the number of rough sleepers in England alone has more than doubled since 2010. Almost 1.2 million older people in Britain, as well as another one million disabled people, are living without the social care they need for basics such as eating, dressing and washing. It's horrific: severely ill people forced to wait 14 hours to go to the toilet or wheelchair users who, with no assistant to help them cook, are now malnourished."

Comment: See also: And check out SOTT radio's:


Fire

Civil war breaking out in Libya as rival factions battle on streets of Tripoli

Libya
Social media photo of the clashes Monday via Libyan Express
Long forgotten in Western mainstream media, Libya has suddenly come back into headlines as a small civil war is erupting within areas under control of the UN-recognized Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli.

Scores of people have been killed and wounded amidst intensifying clashes in the Libyan capital as rival factions vie for control of the city.

Notably, the clashes have involved the shelling of residential areas in southern sections of Tripoli, street-to-street fighting, and tanks in the streets, reminiscent of the 2011 war which eventually led to a NATO air campaign and forcible removal and assassination of Libya's longtime leader Muammar Gaddafi.

Al-Jazeera reports Monday's escalating violence which began over the weekend, and which has resulted in a declared state of emergency being throughout the capital:
At least four people have been killed and seven others wounded in clashes that broke out between rival armed groups in Libya's capital, Tripoli, as they attempt to take control of the city.

The health ministry declared a state of emergency on Monday, according to local media, after the Sunday evening clashes continued to escalate.

The fighting erupted between local militias and al-Kani tribal fighters from Tarhouna, southeast of Tripoli, who are sending reinforcements to the country's north.

Comment: See also: Foreign militants are taking over Libya's Fezzan region


Eye 2

The hidden side of John McCain

john mccain
© AP Photo/ Kevin Hagen
As the Cold War entered its final act in 1985, journalist Helena Cobban participated in an academic conference at an upscale resort near Tucson, Arizona, on U.S.-Soviet interactions in the Middle East. When she attended what was listed as the "Gala Dinner with keynote speech", she quickly learned that the virtual theme of the evening was, "Adopt a Muj."

"I remember mingling with all of these wealthy Republican women from the Phoenix suburbs and being asked, 'Have you adopted a muj?" Cobban told me. "Each one had pledged money to sponsor a member of the Afghan mujahedin in the name of beating the communists. Some were even seated at the event next to their personal 'muj.'"

The keynote speaker of the evening, according to Cobban, was a hard-charging freshman member of Congress named John McCain.

During the Vietnam war, McCain had been captured by the North Vietnamese Army after being shot down on his way to bomb a civilian lightbulb factory. He spent two years in solitary confinement and underwent torture that left him with crippling injuries. McCain returned from the war with a deep, abiding loathing of his former captors, remarking as late as 2000, "I hate the gooks. I will hate them as long as I live." After he was criticized for the racist remark, McCain refused to apologize. "I was referring to my prison guards," he said, "and I will continue to refer to them in language that might offend some people because of the beating and torture of my friends."

Comment: Wherever this man goes, chaos follows. Although he won't be the last of them, the world can breathe a sigh of relief, even if be a momentary one. See also:



Cult

Social media execs meet to plan "strategy" for 2018 election

social media eye
Is the social media crackdown on conservatives about to get even worse? On Friday, representatives from Facebook, Google, Twitter, Microsoft, Snapchat and other major social media companies gathered to discuss "strategy" for the 2018 election. Supposedly they were going to discuss how to combat the flow of "misinformation", but we know what that means. Every time the social media giants pledge to do more to crack down on "fake news", more conservatives get censored. In recent months we have witnessed the greatest purge of conservative voices in the history of the Internet, and as you will see below, even more prominent voices have been hit with bans in recent days. Of course the social media companies are pledging that their censorship efforts are being implemented in an even-handed manner, but obviously all of their meddling has greatly enhanced the probability that Democrats will emerge victorious in November.

Vader

Best of the Web: Bait and switch: While world watched Syria, US attempted false-flag 'attack by Russia' on Afghanistan-Tajikistan border

afghanistan map
Location of the 'airstrike' in northern Afghanistan
While the world was waiting with bated breath to see whether the US would really stage yet another chemical weapons false flag attack in Syria, Washington tried to pull a fast one in Afghanistan by manufacturing a fake crisis between Russia and the Taliban.

It's no secret that the US fears the consequences of Russia's newly pragmatic approach towards the Taliban so it was only a matter of time before it tried to manufacture a fake crisis between them in order to undermine Moscow's peacemaking efforts in Afghanistan, and next week's multilateral meeting in the Russian capital pushed the US to act. Although Washington and Kabul's refusal to participate in this event will deprive it of any immediate political significance, its long-term importance is that it contributes to Moscow's efforts to gradually rebrand the Taliban as a legitimate armed opposition movement by providing them with an international venue for constructively interacting with regional diplomats.

This in and of itself will herald in a sea change in political attitudes towards this group by breaking its diplomatic isolation and enabling it to be perceived as a responsible Eurasian actor, especially in the anti-security domain against ISIS-K. For this reason, it's in the US' interests to stop next week's gathering from taking place, or at the very least, to engineer a crisis between Russia and the Taliban that would lead to the latter's refusal to participate in the event, ergo the false flag attack that just took place in Afghanistan.

Whistle

Whistleblower exposes key player in FBI Russia probe: "It was all a set-up"

lovinger
Adam Lovinger
Former DOD employee uncovered a long history of questionable behavior by FBI informant

Key player in Russia probe appears to have significant ties to Russian government


Adam Lovinger, a former Defense Department analyst, never expected that what he stumbled on during his final months at the Pentagon would expose an integral player in the FBI's handling of President Donald Trump's campaign and alleged Russia collusion.

Lovinger, a whistleblower, is now battling to save his career. The Pentagon suspended his top-secret security clearance May 1, 2017, when he exposed through an internal review that Stefan Halper, who was then an emeritus Cambridge professor, had received roughly $1 million in tax-payer funded money to write Defense Department foreign policy reports, his attorney Sean Bigley said. Before Lovinger's clearance was suspended he had taken a detail to the National Security Council as senior director for strategy. He was only there for five months before he was recalled to the Pentagon, stripped of his prestigious White House detail, and ordered to perform bureaucratic make-work in a Pentagon annex Bigley calls "the land of misfit toys." His security clearance was eventually revoked in March 2018, despite the Pentagon "refusing to turn over a single page of its purported evidence of Lovinger's wrongdoing," Bigley stated. Conservative watchdog group, Judicial Watch, recently filed a federal lawsuit against the Defense Department to obtain the withheld records.

Lovinger also raised concerns about Halper's role in conducting what appeared to be diplomatic meetings with foreigners on behalf of the U.S. government because his role as contractor forbids him from doing so, according to U.S. federal law.

Sheriff

Kremlin releases images of Putin's hiking holiday with colleagues in Siberia

putin on holiday
© Kremlin
Russian President Vladimir Putin has made the most of a weekend away from Moscow, enjoying the quiet life in a Siberian nature reserve with some top Kremlin officials.

Photographs published by the Kremlin show a relaxed-looking Putin walking leisurely in the mountains and forests of the Republic of Tyva in Southern Siberia. A video also shows the president trekking with Nordic walking poles, inspecting the soil, relaxing on a boat, looking pensively across the landscape and surveying native wildlife grazing on the mountainside.

Putin's spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said the Russian leader had spent Saturday and Sunday in Tyva and was accompanied by Russia's Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu, the director of Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) Aleksander Bortnikov and local officials on the weekend sojourn. "Putin walked in the mountains and enjoyed the natural beauty," Peskov said.

Comment: It's just Putin, keeping it real, like he always does: We wonder how many Western politicians could bear to spend their weekend together when they're not being paid for it.


Quenelle

Pink Floyd's Roger Waters blacklisted by Ukraine for debunking Western propaganda

Roger Waters
© Mario Anzuoni / ReutersRoger Waters
Pink Floyd founder Roger Waters has found himself blacklisted and added to the Ukrainian database of national enemies, after statements to Russian media about Crimea and the conflict in Ukraine.

Waters, 74, is wrapping up his US+Them European tour with concerts in St. Petersburg and Moscow this week and spoke with several Russian outlets about both music and his political activism. The rock musician has been an outspoken champion of the Palestinian cause and a critic of Western-backed rebels in Syria.

On Monday, however, his name appeared in the "purgatory" database of Mirotvorets (Peacemaker), maintained by people connected with Ukraine's security and intelligence services and listing alleged enemies of the state.

Comment: You can be sure that when you're blacklisted by the neo-Nazis in Ukraine, you're doing something right.

On Waters: On Ukraine:


SOTT Logo Radio

SOTT Focus: NewsReal: Senator McCain is Dead! Trump Impeachment For Real? Imminent Syria 'Chemical Attack'

mccain death newsreal
Senator John 'The Maverick' McCain III is dead. This week on NewsReal, Joe and Niall look back on the illustrious career of an American hero and titan of US politics, whose indelible contributions to the War Party over four decades have earned him a place in the pantheon of Exceptionalistan.

Also this week: 'revelations' in two court cases stemming from the Mueller investigation produced a terrible week for President Trump, spurring the media to again go all out with calls for his impeachment. The Washington Crazies are not actually serious about forcing Trump out, are they?

Meanwhile in Syria, state forces amassing in the country's northwest to reclaim Idlib province for Damascus are being met - yet again - with the imminent threat of another staged chemical attack, with the Russian government warning that the plot is a pretext for Western powers to launch more airstrikes against Syrian military targets.


Live audio broadcast from 16:00 UTC / 12:00 US Eastern / 18:00 Central European. Video upload available Monday 27th August here: NewsReal with Joe & Niall

Running Time: 01:27:48

Download: MP3