Puppet MastersS


Bad Guys

Dennis Kucinich: Crimes against humanity in Gaza: is it really a 'buffer zone' - or a bigger plan?

tanks
© Bjorn Kietzmann / Demotix / CorbisThe US Senate unanimously approved $225m funding for Israel’s Iron Dome on Friday, as Israel continues to ask for more funding from Washington.
It's time to step back and ask if we want to support Israel if it wants to eject all Palestinians from their land


Late last week, the White House decried Israel's attack on a UN school in Gaza as "totally unacceptable" and "totally indefensible", then proceeded to approve $225m in funding for its Iron Dome. On Monday, the US state department went further, calling the airstrikes upon a UN school "disgraceful" - and yet America provides Israel with more than $3.1bn every year, restocking the ability of the Israel Defense Force (IDF) to hit more schools, and to wage total war against an imprisoned people, because of their nationality.

American taxpayers should not be paying for this. And the western world should stop rejecting serious inquiries about Israel's moral inconsistencies, or allow it to benefit from cognitive dissonance and information overload amid the current crisis in Gaza.

There is a land grab going on. The Israeli prime minister, Binjamin Netanyahu, has shrunk Gaza's habitable land mass by 44%, with an edict establishing a 3km (1.8-mile) buffer zone, a "no-go" zone for Palestinians - and that's quite significant, because a good part of Gaza is only 3 to 4 miles wide. Over 250,000 Palestinians within this zone must leave their homes, or be bombed. As their territorial space collapses, 1.8m Gazans now living in 147 square miles will be compressed into 82 square miles.

Gaza's entire social and physical infrastructure of housing, hospitals, places of worship, more than 130 of its schools, plus markets, water systems, sewer systems and roads are being destroyed. Under constant attack, without access to water, sanitary facilities, food and medical care, Gazans face an IDF-scripted apocalypse.

With Gaza's land mass shrinking due to Israeli military action, it's about time someone asked: What is the end game? Three weeks ago, Moshe Feiglin, deputy speaker of the Knesset, called for Gaza to "become part of sovereign Israel and will be populated by Jews. This will also serve to ease the housing crisis in Israel."

Israel has a housing crisis? After the "no-go" buffer zone is evacuated, there will be 21,951 Palestinians per square mile in Gaza, while Israel's population density stands at 964 persons per square mile.

Star of David

The truth behind the spin: All the essential facts about Gaza you need to know

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© Associated Press/Lefteris PitarakisA displaced Palestinian boy, still inside a classroom, eats a snack at the Abu Hussein U.N. school in Jebaliya refugee camp. Some 3,300 Gazans seeking shelter from the fighting had been crowded into the U.N. school in Jebaliya refugee camp when it was hit by a series of Israeli artillery shells.
As the death toll rises, cease-fires come and go, and protests mount, here are the key facts to keep in mind.

Two related things happened over the weekend: First, the death toll of Israel's assault on Gaza climbed to more than 1,800 Palestinians, overwhelmingly civilians, including some 400 children. Second, In Washington, D.C., an estimated 50,000 demonstrators gathered in front of the White House to protest the American role in this violent escalation, and then marched on to the Washington Post building (for symbolism's sake) to protest mainstream media coverage of the crisis.

I have recently debunked the ubiquitous allegation that "human shields" are responsible for Gaza's rising civilian death toll, and exposed the talking points used to invert the reality on the ground. Here, I would like to explain what brought 50,000 people out on the streets of Washington; namely the mishandling and misrepresentation of this crisis by both the U.S. media and the U.S. administration.

Monkey Wrench

Judge quashes Fort Collins', Colorado fracking ban

A Larimer County District Court judge has struck down Fort Collins' five-year moratorium on hydraulic fracturing, dealing the second blow in a month to Front Range cities that have sought to ban the drilling technique.

Larimer District Judge Gregory Lammons in a nine-page opinion issued Thursday ruled in favor of the Colorado Oil & Gas Association in its lawsuit challenging a fracking ban passed by Fort Collins voters in November. The temporary ban was meant to be in place while the effects of oil and gas development on human health were studied.

"The five-year ban on the use of hydraulic fracturing within the boundaries of the City of Fort Collins is preempted by the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Act for two reasons: the five-year ban substantially impedes a significant state interest and the ban prohibits what state law allows," Lammons said in his decision.

City of Fort Collins officials had defended the city's moratorium as different from Longmont's fracking ban, while the Oil & Gas Association contended the fracking ban broke state law. Fracking involves pumping water mixed with sand and chemicals into a drilled hole to retrieve oil and natural gas from shale deep underground.

Folder

New Snowden document labels Israel as top spy threat to U.S.

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© Baz Ratner/ReutersAn Israeli soldier rides an armored personnel carrier toward a staging area near the Gaza Strip border on August 4, 2014.
Israel was singled out in 2007 as a top espionage threat against the U.S. government, including its intelligence services, in a newly published National Security Agency (NSA) document obtained by fugitive leaker Edward Snowden, according to a news report Monday.

The document also identified Israel, along with North Korea, Cuba and India, as a "leading threat" to the infrastructure of U.S. financial and banking institutions.

The threats were listed in the NSA's 2007 Strategic Mission List, according to the document obtained by journalist/activist Glenn Greenwald, a founding editor of The Intercept, an online magazine that has a close relationship with Snowden, a former NSA and CIA contractor who fled the U.S. with thousands of top-secret documents last year.

Sherlock

Was Malaysian Flight 17 shot down by a jet fighter? A German expert thinks so

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"From start to finish, the Ukraine crisis has been instigated by US imperialism. Every action Washington has taken has been directed at exacerbating and intensifying this crisis. The longer this crisis goes on, the clearer it becomes that US policy is directed not so much at Ukraine as at Russia itself. Ukraine, it would seem, is meant merely to provide the pretext for a war with Russia."

- Bill Van Auken, "Does Washington want war with Russia?", World Socialist Web Site
German pilot and airlines expert, Peter Haisenko, thinks that Malaysia Flight 17 was not blown up by a ground-based antiaircraft missile, but shot down by the type of double-barreled 30-mm guns used on Ukrainian SU-25 fighter planes. Haisenko presented his theory in a widely-circulated and controversial article which appeared on the Global Research website titled "Revelations of German Pilot: Shocking Analysis of the "Shooting Down" of Malaysian MH17. "Aircraft Was Not Hit by a Missile". Here's an excerpt from the article:

"The facts speak clear and loud and are beyond the realm of speculation: The cockpit shows traces of shelling! You can see the entry and exit holes. The edge of a portion of the holes is bent inwards. These are the smaller holes, round and clean, showing the entry points most likely that of a 30 millimeter caliber projectile...." ("Revelations of German Pilot: Shocking Analysis of the "Shooting Down" of Malaysian MH17. "Aircraft Was Not Hit by a Missile"", Global Research)

Magnify

Monitoring agency reports no violations on Ukrainian border by Russia

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© Reuters / Sergei KarpukhinAlexander Hug (C), deputy head for the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe's (OSCE) monitoring mission in Ukraine.
The OSCE monitoring mission on the Russian-Ukrainian border has registered no violations of international law by the Russian side during its week-long stay at the Gukovo and Donetsk checkpoints, mission head Paul Picard said.

During his press conference, Picard was asked to comment on Western claims that Russia is shelling Ukrainian territory and has starting deployment troops to the country.

"In these two border crossings we haven't seen such happenings," he replied.

The observers were assessing two checkpoints - Gukovo and Donetsk - on the border with Ukraine's Lugansk Region, which are separated from each other by around 30km.

Gukovo checkpoint is currently closed from the Ukrainian side, but traffic at the Donetsk border crossing is "high," Picard stressed.

Brick Wall

Russia responds to sanctions by banning agricultural products from USA, EU, Norway, Canada, and Australia

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Russian PM Dmitry Medvedev has signed a decree on the full ban for imports of beef, pork, poultry meat, fish, cheese, milk, vegetables and fruit from Australia, Canada, the EU, the US and Norway.

The ban will last a year, starting August 7.

The Prime Minister also said Russia has stopped transit flights by Ukrainian airlines to such destinations as Georgia, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Turkey, adding that the country was considering a ban of transit flights for European and US Airlines to the Asia-Pacific region.

Western sanctions were a "dead-end track", but Russia has been forced to respond to the measures taken by the western countries, Medvedev added.

Alcohol imports from both the EU and the US will not be restricted.

Gold Seal

Rep. Justin Amash delivers one of the most scathing, unforgiving victory speeches in recent memory

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© AP/The Grand Rapids Press, Cory MorseU.S. Rep. Justin Amash celebrates his primary election victory over Brian Ellis at GP Sports inside the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel in downtown Grand Rapids Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2014.
After easily defeating his primary challenger on Tuesday, Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) delivered a scathing victory speech slamming his opponent for running a "smear campaign" against him.

"I ran for office to stop people like you," Amash said, referring to his primary challenger, Brian Ellis.

"You owe my family and this community an apology for your disgusting, despicable smear campaign. You had the audacity to try and call me today after running a campaign that was called the nastiest in the country," he continued.

Amash ended up defeated the Chamber of Commerce-backed Ellis by 14 points.

As the Washington Post points out, Ellis in one campaign ad cited a quote from Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) claiming the Arab-American Amash is "Al Qaeda's best friend in Congress."

Comment: Good for him. No fake political cozying.


Stormtrooper

Amnesty International calls for investigation into abuse of power by pro-Kiev "vigilantes", citing instances of abductions and physical abuse

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A still from YouTube video by lyashkocomua
Amnesty International has called for an investigation into the abuse of power by pro-Kiev "vigilantes," including Ukrainian ultra-radical MP Oleg Lyashko. The organization described instances of abductions and physical abuse of victims.

So-called "interrogations" carried out by Lyashko - which he has boasted about on his official YouTube page - alarmed the human rights watchdog. Amnesty issued a report calling for the lawmaker to be held accountable for his actions.

"Amnesty International has recently raised its concerns with the Ukrainian authorities about one particularly errant MP who has been 'detaining' - in effect abducting - and ill-treating individuals across the region," the organization said in a statement.

Dollars

U.S. sanctions against Russia will hasten the demise of the dollar

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© RIA Novosti
The US dollar, the dominant global currency since 1944, may lose some of its luster due to the American-led sanctions against Russia over the turmoil in Ukraine. The greenback has been fading in favor since the global financial crisis in 2008.

The US-led sanctions against Russia may have backfired on the US because it threatens to "hasten a move away from the dollar that's been stirring since the global financial crisis [in 2008]," Rachel Evans at Bloomberg wrote. In an unexpected turn of events, Hong Kong's central bank has bought more than $9.5 billion since the start of July "to prevent its currency from rallying as the sanctions stoked speculation of an influx of Russian cash," she noted.

"OAO MegaFon, Russia's second-largest wireless operator, shifted some cash holdings into the city's dollar," according to Bloomberg. "Trading of the Chinese yuan versus the Russian ruble rose to the highest on July 31 since the end of 2010, according to the Moscow Exchange."