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Social media mockery ensues after Israel claims Ben & Jerry's ice-cream boycott is 'new form of terrorism: 'Are they going to bomb Vermont?'

Israel flag ben and jerry ice cream boycott
© Emmanuel Dunand/AFP via Getty
Israel's president has been targeted by a barrage of social media snark after he bravely compared Ben & Jerry's decision, to stop selling its ice cream in the occupied Palestinian territories, to terrorism.

The Vermont-based ice cream brand, which has developed a reputation over the years as a champion of progressive causes, announced earlier this week that it would be "inconsistent" with its values to sell its ice cream in Gaza and the West Bank. The boycott was prompted by "concerns shared with us by our fans and trusted partners," the left-leaning ice cream maker explained.

The decision sparked both applause and condemnation but, on Wednesday, Israel's President Isaac Herzog issued a uniquely extreme analysis of the move.

Comment: Apparently the decision was a water-down version of what the B&J board really wanted. From the Jerusalem Post:
Ben & Jerry's Independent Board of Directors wanted to boycott Israel in its entirety, but was stopped from doing so by the ice-cream maker's CEO and the British-based parent company Unilever.

"The statement released by Ben & Jerry's regarding its operation in Israel and the Occupied Palestine Territory does not reflect the position of the Independent Board nor was it approved by the Independent Board," read a statement by Ben & Jerry's Independent Board of Directors.

Unilever has clarified that it plans to continue sales to areas of Israel within the pre-1967 lines, but would do so with a different local company.

Avi Zinger, owner of the Israeli Ben & Jerry's franchise, who always sold his ice cream on both sides of the Green Line, has for years resisted pressure by the parent company to boycott West Bank settlements.

But he ultimately has no control over the decision by Unilever, which has owned the global ice cream company since 2000.

Zinger told The Jerusalem Post he hopes the government of Israel and a persistent public campaign would sway Unilever to change its mind.


The hasbara trolls are being marshalled:


From the article:
The Israeli online platform Act.IL, which was developed in June 2017 to recruit and organise a troll army of thousands of people to insert themselves in digital discussions regarding Israel-Palestine, has directed its users to wade in on the decision.

The app urged trolls to comment under relevant Facebook and Twitter posts from various news organisations, including the Daily Mail and the New York Times, criticising Ben & Jerry's.

"Comment on these posts stating that boycotting does nothing to solve the conflict, and like all pro-Israel comments you can," one alert stated, as documented by @AntiBDSApp, a Twitter account that monitors Act.IL's activities.


Act.IL was launched in partnership with the Israeli Ministry of Strategic Affairs, whose minister has referred to it as an "iron dome of truth". It has received both funding and guidance from the Israeli state.

The app has been described as "astroturfing": organised and deceptive government-backed public relations activity that falsely creates the impression of a spontaneous grassroots campaign.

Michael Bueckert, a researcher and vice president of Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East, who runs the @AntiBDSApp account, believes the campaign will not be effective.
And finally:




Light Saber

Russia files first ever ECHR complaint against Ukraine, over Maidan massacre, censorship, discrimination & Crimea water blockade

ECHR human right ukraine russia
© Reuters / Vincent Kessler; (inset) Getty Images / kutaytanir; Getty Images / visual7
European Court of Human Rights, in Strasbourg, France.
The Russian General Prosecutor's Office has announced that it intends to bring a case against the Ukrainian government in Europe's top rights court, over a range of issues stemming from the 2014 Maidan and the country's civil war.

In a statement released on Thursday, officials in Moscow revealed that they had applied to the European Court of Human Rights with an inter-state complaint for the first time. According to the release, they are requesting that justices look into "the responsibility of the Ukrainian authorities for the death of civilians, illegal imprisonment and cruel treatment of people," in both the Maidan and in the subsequent conflict in the Donbass.


Comment: Recent statements from Russia seem to reveal concern that, since Kiev has repeatedly flouted the peace process and with deaths in Donbass surpassing 13,000 people, a critical juncture has been reached and Russia is being forced to intervene, diplomatically, at first, to prevent the already dire situation deteriorating further.


A series of bloody incidents defined the 2014 conflict, including the deaths dozens of supporters of the uprising at the hands of police, and 39 anti-Maidan protesters killed when activists torched the Trade Unions House in Odessa. Dozens of Maidan supporters were killed by sniper fire on Kiev's central square in February of that year, in an incident which has never properly been investigated. Some historians, such as Canadian-Ukrainian professor Ivan Katchanovski, have questioned whether that attack had been orchestrated, in an effort to inflame anti-government sentiment.

Comment: It's unlikely that the ECHR will treat Russia's complaint fairly, but, where possible, Russia follows due process. Moreover, the crimes mentioned above will be on the official record, the ECHR will be exposed for the corrupt institution that it is, and, ultimately, should current events worsen, it's likely that Russia will take the necessary action, in the same way it did for Syria:


Mr. Potato

Tikhanovskaya's traveling Belarusian circus: Another example of failed Western 'regime-change'-based policy in ex-Soviet Unioncountries

Belarus Svetlana Tikhanovskaya
© Reuters / Lehtikuva / Heikki Saukkomaa
Belarusian opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya during an interview with the media in Helsinki, Finland on March 1, 2021.
The West's favorite Belarusian opposition figurehead, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, has been in Washington, asking lawmakers to impose sanctions on her country, in a bid to overthrow its embattled veteran leader, Alexander Lukashenko.

"I think it's high time for democratic countries to unite and show their teeth," she told politicians, articulating her dreams for her own country in pro-American terms. That has undoubtedly won her supporters in the West, and fits with Washington's classic regime-change template - hijacking popular protests to redraw the geopolitical frontlines of the world.

Tikhanovskaya appears to be the latest in a line of marginal opposition figures who are anointed as saviors by the West, like Venezuela's Juan Guaidó or Russia's Alexey Navalny. Once the narrative of a pro-democratic figure seeking to align with Western states has been planted and media follows the lead, it is then deemed legitimate for Washington to organize their "civil society" against that state. Much like in Ukraine, NATO countries undermine the sovereignty of Belarus under the auspices of supporting the people.

Comment:


Recycle

Russia eliminating US dollar transactions in its foreign military deals - state arms exporter

helicopter
© Reuters / RIA Novosti
A Kamov Ka-52 Hokum-B helicopter stands at Kubinka air base before the Victory Day parade at Red Square in Moscow, Russia
The US dollar's share in Russia's military contracts with other countries is approaching zero, according to the country's main defense contractor Rosoboronexport.

"Most of Rosoboronexport's contracts are currently concluded in rubles or in the national currencies of partner countries. The share of dollars in our contracts is steadily approaching zero," the company's CEO Alexander Mikheyev told reporters at MAKS 2021 Air Show.

He noted that Russia has been deliberately abandoning the dollar in payments for its export arms contracts, which, for the past few years, have brought the country about $15 billion annually in US dollar equivalent, TV channel Zvezda notes.

Comment: See also:


Oil Well

Iran opens oil terminal in Gulf of Oman to bypass Strait of Hormuz

tanker
© REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed
FILE PHOTO: Oil tankers pass through the Strait of Hormuz, December 21, 2018.
Iran has opened its first oil terminal in the Gulf of Oman, President Hassan Rouhani said on Thursday, to allow Iranian tankers to avoid using the strategically vulnerable Strait of Hormuz, which has been a focus of regional tension for decades.

"This is a strategic move and an important step for Iran. It will secure the continuation of our oil exports," Rouhani said in a televised speech. "This new crude export terminal shows the failure of Washington's sanctions on Iran."

Rouhani said Iran aimed to export 1 million barrels per day (bpd) of oil from Bandar-e Jask, a port on Iran's Gulf of Oman coast, just south of the Strait of Hormuz.

Comment: See also:


Eye 1

Ice Age Farmer Report: Global wheat supplies short as drought/flood ravage crops & supply chain falters

food
Wheat crops are failing in the US, Canada, and Russia--the "breadbasket" top exporters that feed the rest of the world--as other exporters like Kazakhstan restrict their exports to protect their own people. Engineered attacks on supply chains continue from South Africa to Vietnam. Food prices are exploding as shortages can no longer be hidden, and the true crisis of global food shortages lies ahead. Grow your own food now!


Sources

Pirates

EU & US condemn Turkey's move to repopulate Cyprus buffer zone, Erdogan declares it "new era"

Varosha
© Reuters / Harun Ucar
FILE PHOTO: A man holds a fence in an area fenced off by the Turkish military since 1974 in the abandoned coastal area of Varosha in Turkish-controlled northern Cyprus, October 8, 2020
France on Wednesday criticised as a "provocation" a move by Turkish Cypriot authorities to partially reopen an abandoned town in Cyprus for potential resettlement, in the latest critique from the West that Ankara has dismissed.

Turkish Cypriots said on Tuesday that part of Varosha would come under civilian control and people would be able to reclaim properties - angering Greek Cypriots who accused their Turkish rivals of orchestrating a land-grab by stealth.

Varosha, an eerie collection of derelict high-rise hotels and residences in a military zone nobody has been allowed to enter, has been deserted since a 1974 war split the island.

Comment: RT reports:
Washington shoots down Turkey's two-state solution for Cyprus, as stand-off on disputed island intensifies

Sitting on the border between Greek and Turkish-held Cyprus, Varosha has remained abandoned since Turkish forces invaded the island in 1974 to stave off a Greek Cypriot coup. Though inside Turkish territory on the island, Varosha has served as a buffer between that territory and the Greek sector of the island, which is recognized internationally as Cyprus.

However, he can expect little to no international support. A senior US diplomat told Reuters shortly afterwards that Washington opposes such a deal, and Secretary of State Tony Blinken earlier condemned Turkey's planned reopening of Varosha and called on Erdogan to reverse his decision.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said earlier this month that the EU will "never, ever" accept a two-state solution.

Varosha was once the hub of Cyprus' tourism industry, and about 17,000 Gerek Cypriots lived there before the Turkish invasion. It has since remained cordoned-off by barricades and barbed wire, and patrolled by some of the 35,000 or so Turkish troops stationed in northern Cyprus. The UN's position on Varosha is that it should fall under the control of international peacekeepers, until Cyprus can be reunited as a federation or a power sharing agreement is reached.

Though peace talks over the last two decades have occasionally shown signs of progress toward this end, relations between Greece, Turkey, and their respective allies on Cyprus have taken a nosedive in recent years, due to competing claims to the energy-rich waters around the island. Greece has repeatedly warned Turkey away from exploratory oil drilling in the area, which Ankara has ignored, while claiming its own territorial rights in the region.

"One way or another...we will carry out our oil exploration operations in the eastern Mediterranean, Cyprus, and all those seas," Erdogan said earlier this month, despite opposition and threats of sanctions from the EU.
The number of provocations and international incidents caused by or leading back to Turkey, under Erdogan's leadership, is notable; however that's not to say that Erdogan himself is directly responsible for instigating all of them:


Snakes in Suits

Violent extremists took over the US Capitol long before January 6

Violent Extremists
No longer content with absurd claims that the January 6 Capitol riot was as bad as the 9/11 attacks, Democratic Party-aligned pundits are now insisting that it was in fact worse.

On a recent appearance with MSNBC's ReidOut with Joy Reid, former Bush strategist Matthew Dowd said he felt the Capitol riot was "much worse" than 9/11 and that this is the "most perilous point in time" since the beginning of the American Civil War.

"To me, though there was less loss of life on January 6, January 6 was worse than 9/11, because it's continued to rip our country apart and get permission for people to pursue autocratic means, and so I think we're in a much worse place than we've been," Dowd said. "I think we're in the most perilous point in time since 1861 in the advent of the Civil War."

"I do too," Reid said.


Control Panel

Prime minister risks major rebellion over Covid jab passports, say Tory MPs

People dancing at Bar Fibre in Leeds after England’s restrictions lifted on Monday.
© Ioannis Alexopoulos/PA
People dancing at Bar Fibre in Leeds after England’s restrictions lifted on Monday.
More than 40 Conservatives said to be ready to defy government over civil liberties concerns

Conservative MPs believe Boris Johnson faces a major rebellion over Covid vaccine passports but could be supported by Labour, who were on Tuesday night wavering over whether to back them.

Tory MPs opposed to the plan for Covid passes to enter nightclubs and other crowded indoor venues said more than 40 Conservatives were prepared to defy the prime minister over civil liberties concerns, particularly as No 10 has refused to rule out extending the passes to pubs and other sectors.

The scale of the rebellion could put any vote on a knife-edge if opposition parties also oppose the idea, which was proposed by Johnson on Monday in an extraordinary U-turn hours after clubs were allowed to open in England for the first time in 16 months.

At least 42 Tory MPs have signed a cross-party Big Brother Watch declaration against "Covid status certification to deny individuals access to general services, businesses or jobs" in recent months. More MPs privately told the Guardian they were unlikely to back such a move, especially if it remained a vaccine-only pass that did not recognise a negative test result or evidence of antibodies.

Vader

Fascist Mitch McConnell warns of lockdowns if COVID vaccine rates don't increase

mitch mcconnell
© Sipa USA via AP
A fresh wave of pandemic lockdowns like the ones that crippled the country last year loom on the horizon if people don't wise up and get vaccinated against COVID-19, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell warned.

"These shots need to get in everybody's arms as rapidly as possible or we´re going to be back in a situation in the fall that we don't yearn for — that we went through last year," McConnell (R-Ky.) said at a news conference Tuesday, adding, "This is not complicated."

Asked about comments from Utah Gov. Spencer Cox alleging that conservative pundits are killing people with their rhetoric, McConnell stated that he encourages everybody to "ignore all of these other voices that are giving demonstrably bad advice."

McConnell's call to seek trusted and verified information about the virus and vaccines mirrors White House efforts this past week to counter false information that they say is spreading on social media and cable news.

Comment: Regardless of vaccines, we know lockdowns don't work other than to destroy the economy, increase depression and alcoholism, and violate countless civil rights. So what's really going on here?