Puppet MastersS


Bullseye

Scott Ritter: No matter what advanced weaponry the West sends, there is no magic wand to conjure a Ukrainian victory

F16 gevechtsvliegtuig
© ANPUS Airforce F-16 fighter jet
Zelensky's team keeps asking for more advanced military hardware as though hoping for a divine intervention that can turn the tide of war

In Japanese, the term Kamikaze, or 'Divine Wind', has taken on a dark interpretation, linked as it is to the suicidal pilots who flew their aircraft into enemy ships in the closing months of the Second World War. The original meaning of the phrase, however, was much different, drawn from Japan's history when, in 1274 and again in 1281, powerful typhoons destroyed the fleets of the invading Mongols, saving the Japanese islands and their people from the wrath of the Mongol leader Kublai Khan.

Ukrainian presidential adviser Mikhail Podoliak appeared to be invoking a modern-day manifestation of the 'Divine Wind' of 13th century Japanese history when, in response to a statement made by the Italian Minister of Defense Guido Crosetto, he advocated for a political solution to the ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine by calling on the West to provide F-16 fighters, ATACMS long-range artillery rockets, and modern missile and air defense systems to Ukraine.

Bizarro Earth

Nearly half of Ukrainian diplomats & staff not returning to Kiev after work abroad, fearing conscription

ukraine funeral
© APFuneral workers down the coffin with Ukrainian soldier Andrii Husak aka Lytsar of 47th brigade during a funeral ceremony in Dnipro, Ukraine, Tuesday, July 11, 2023
Ukrainian diplomats are increasingly refusing to return to Ukraine after the start of the full-scale Russian invasion.

This information is reported by the publication "Zerkalo nedeli", citing data from its diplomatic sources.

As the publication writes, since the beginning of 2022, at least 40-60% of diplomats have not returned from Ukrainian embassies abroad. In particular, last year, around twenty embassy and consulate staff members from the United States were supposed to return to Ukraine, but only one of them came home. And from some embassies, no one returned at all.

The main factors influencing diplomats' decisions are financial matters and established family life abroad. However, over a hundred diplomats who did return to Ukraine from long-term foreign assignments have been struggling to find positions in the central apparatus of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for months.

Comment: It's possible that some are not returning because the entire system has become so corrupted that finding other areas of employment within the government is increasingly difficult, however it's likely that the main reasons are that they fear conscription - and rightly so, because the military is regularly seen dragging men into vans - and they've come to realise that the Kiev junta is fast losing the West's proxy war and that the number of dead is in well over 200,000 - which may be partly thanks to better access to information outside of the country : The Ukrainian nightmare


Quenelle - Golden

Chad rejects joining Africa's ECOWAS in military action against Niger

Niger
© APNiger has played a key part in Western strategies to combat a terrorist insurgency that has plagued the Sahel since 2012
Chad will not intervene in a coup in neighbouring Niger, the country's defence minister has said.


Comment: The Guardian reports:
Chad's defence minister, Gen Daoud Yaya Brahim, told national television on Friday: "We always advocate dialogue between Nigerians and we will never intervene by military means."

He made his remarks on state television on Friday, just as West Africa's regional bloc, ECOWAS, said it has devised a possible plan to reinstate ousted President Mohamed Bazoum.

"All the elements that will go into any eventual intervention have been worked out, including the resources needed, and including the how and when we are going to deploy the force," said ECOWAS commissioner Abdel-Fatau Musah.

Comment: The West seems to feel pretty threatened by these recent developments:


X

RFK Jr sues 'state actors' Google and YouTube over censorship

rfk jr google youtube
Robert F. Kennedy Junior is suing YouTube along with parent company Google for playing the role of 'state actors' by censoring him online due to pressure on from the Biden Administration.

The suit alleges that the amount of pressure to censor people online has increased under President Joe Biden. Other examples of this behavior can be seen with regards to reporting critical evidence of COVID-19 vaccines.


Comment: See also:


Briefcase

Dianne Feinstein's daughter holds power of attorney over ailing senator amid family finance fight

Sen. Dianne Feinstein
© Drew Angerer/Getty ImagesSen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., attends a business hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on May 11, 2023. It was Feinstein's first hearing after fighting a case of shingles and being absent from the Senate for almost three months.
Katherine Feinstein, 66, has filed 2 lawsuits on her mother's behalf.

The daughter of Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., has been given power of attorney over the sitting senator and is handling the 90-year-old's legal affairs.

Katherine Feinstein, 66, has filed two lawsuits on her mother's behalf in an effort to gain access to the estate of the senator's late husband. The senator's decision to delegate management of her affairs comes as Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill argue whether Feinstein is no longer fit for office.

Comment: See also:


People 2

Obama once wrote to ex-girlfriend that he 'repeatedly fantasizes about making love to men,' biographer says

barack obama
© Win McNamee/Getty Images
Former President Barack Obama once wrote that he fantasized about having sexual relations with other men, biographer David Garrow said in an interview published on Wednesday.

The former president expressed his fantasies in a letter to a girlfriend at the time, Garrow told Tablet magazine in the interview. That letter has been redacted and is currently in the possession of Emory University, according to Garrow.

The ex-girlfriend provided a copy of the letter, but had redacted one paragraph, Garrow told Tablet, who said she revealed the paragraph was about "homosexuality."

Comment: Fox News adds:
[...]Tablet made it clear that Obama's version of the breakup was much different in his own book, as he indicated embracing "Black racial consciousness" clashed with his White girlfriend.

"Whose version of the story is correct? Who knows. The bridge between the two accounts is Obama's emerging attachment to Blackness, which required him to fall in love with and marry a Black woman. In Obama's account, his attachment to Blackness is truthful and noble. In Jager's account, his claims are instrumental and selfish; he grants particularism to the experience and suffering of his own tribe while denying it to others," Tablet's David Samuels wrote in the preamble that also put a spotlight on "Obama's hostility to American exceptionalism."

[...]

Here are the most eyebrow-raising tidbits:

Not normal

"He's not normal — as in not a normal politician or a normal human being," Garrow said after telling a story about Obama's lawyer warning him not to ask about his father.

Garrow later referred to Obama as "a creature from another planet" when discussing his wife Michelle Obama being raised by a close, loving family.

[...]

Garrow feels Obama's "Dream from My Father" was fabricated

"He wants people to believe his story. For me to conclude that Dreams from My Father was historical fiction — oh God, did that infuriate him," Garrow said. "He doesn't want the writerliness challenged. It's my story and I'm sticking to it. The book ['Dreams'] is so fictionalized."

Garrow continued:
"It's so inaccurate, whether about the dynamics among the guys in Hawaii or what's going on in the community group on the far South Side [of Chicago]. And it completely omits women. I've always thought that there'd eventually be a feminist critique of Obama because his mother and all the girlfriends — they're not there. They don't exist."
Garrow revealed he spoke with Obama for eight hours in three off-the-record sessions while he was still president. He was derisive about Obama, saying the things he shared that most "energized" him were "hilariously inconsequential," like boasting about being fluent in Indonesian in his youth.

Garrow made the same "historical fiction" charge in Rising Star.

"He further accuses [Obama] of inventing a racial identity struggle that never happened and retrofitting his early life story to conform to it," New York Times writer Brent Staples wrote in his review of Rising Star.

Samuels has questions about Obama's current role

"He lives in a large brick mansion in Kalorama. Doesn't it strike you as weird that he's an ex-president, he's comparatively young, and he's living in the center of Washington, D.C.? The original excuse was that Sasha had to finish school. Then you could say, 'Well, the opposition to Trump needs a figure to rally around.' But now Sasha has graduated from USC, Trump is gone, Joe Biden was elected present, but he's still there," he said.

"Doesn't that strike you as odd? I mean, I have heard from more than one source that there are regular meetings at Obama's house in Kalorama involving top figures in the current White House, with Secret Service and cars outside. I don't write about it because it's not my lane," Samuels continued. "There are over a thousand reporters in Washington, and yet there are zero stakeouts of Obama's mansion, if only to tell us who is coming and going. But he clearly has his oar in."

Obama is 'just as insecure as Trump'

"He has no interest in building the Democratic Party as an institution. I think that's obvious. And I don't think he had any truly deep, meaningful policy commitments other than the need to feel and to be perceived as victorious, as triumphant. I've sometimes said to people that I think Barack is actually just as insecure as Trump, but in ways that are not readily perceived by the vast majority of people. I think that's probably my most basic takeaway," Garrow said.

"But it does go back to 'Dreams' being a work of fiction, that the absence of an actual personal story makes him need to compose one," he continued. "For every time he says, 'Oh, I spent years reading the history of the civil rights movement,' I know he read [Garrow's book 'Bearing the Cross'], but I don't think he read much else. This is someone who ... 98 percent of his reading has always been fiction, not history."

Obama would be 'too lazy' for a spot on the Supreme Court

"He'd be terrible because he's too lazy. This is in the book. It goes back to him being Hawaiian. At one point, he says, 'I'm fundamentally lazy and it's because I'm from Hawaii.' That's close to the actual quote," Garrow said.

Obsession with celebrities

"I've always found [Barack and Michelle Obama's] need to hang out with celebrities bizarre. Because the people they both were, all the way up through at least 2000, would've had no desire to do that. It wouldn't have crossed their minds to be with Beyoncé and Jay-Z or Richard Branson, or you name it," Garrow said.

"Black people in Chicago, everyone, Jerry Wright, Hermene Hartman, they're not surprised that Barack turned into someone else," he continued. "But they can't explain why Michelle turned into someone else."

Samuels added:
"He's happy to go on NPR and talk about meaning or Marilynne Robinson novels or whatever, to make the wine moms identify with him, so he can put one over on them. Just don't ask him to visit the hospital when you get cancer, because he'll be hanging out on someone's yacht, with the other winners."
We'll just leave this here:




Dollars

Austria's leader proposes enshrining the use of cash in his country's constitution

Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer
© AP Photo/Heinz-Peter Bader, FileAustrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer
Austria's leader is proposing to enshrine in the country's constitution a right to use cash, which remains more popular in the Alpine nation than in many other places.

Chancellor Karl Nehammer said in a statement on Friday that "more and more people are concerned that cash could be restricted as a means of payment in Austria." His office said that the "uncertainty" is fueled by contradictory information and reports.

"People in Austria have a right to cash," Nehammer said.

While payments by card and electronic methods have become increasingly dominant in many European countries, Austria and neighboring Germany remain relatively attached to cash. The government says 47 billion euros ($51 billion) per year are withdrawn from ATMs in Austria, a country of about 9.1 million people.

Comment: This is a concern that is increasingly gaining attention across much of the West; over in the UK, astrophysicist, and brother of former Labour leader's, Piers Corbyn, recently made a point of paying with cash at a cashless shop:




Roses

Died suddenly: New Jersey Lt. Gov. Sheila Oliver dead at 71

Sheila Oliver
© APNew Jersey Lt. Gov. Sheila Oliver has died, according to her family.
New Jersey Lt. Gov. Sheila Oliver, the first black woman to serve as speaker of the state Assembly, died Tuesday after being hospitalized with an undisclosed illness.

Oliver, 71, was serving as acting governor this week while Gov. Phil Murphy was vacationing in Italy.

She was admitted to Cooperman Barnabas Medical Center in Livingston on Monday, said Murphy's office, adding the governor will now be returning home early.

Arrow Up

Desperation Creeps In

There is only one way to explain this shambles: Every one of these crises traces back to the Democratic Party's obsession with taking and holding power more or less indefinitely to suit its hubristic, end-of-history "narrative" of righteous liberal triumph. — Patrick Lawrence
Scumbags Together
© kunstler.com
That silence you hear these dog days of a wilting empire is the calm before the storm and everybody knows it. "Joe Biden's" final desperate ploy against the menace of Donald Trump looks about on par with the Ukraine spring offensive, hardly even worth a "hey, nice try."

So, the best they could do was to charge Mr. Trump with objecting vocally to an election that looked as rotten as Hunter's uncapped teeth? We all saw what happened overnight November 3 and 4, 2020: what the numbers looked like in the swing precincts at midnight and the magic mathematics that swapped tens of thousands of votes over from the Trump column to the Biden column (say, whu?) ... the shutdown of the Fulton County State Farm Arena due to a supposedly leaking toilet and the ensuing monkey business with rolly-bags full of ballots under the tables captured by the closed-circuit cameras... the miraculous wee-hour harvest of ballots in Milwaukee... US Postal Service truck full of completed ballots out of Bethpage, Long Island, that turned up in Philadelphia... Mark Zuckerberg's $419-million-dollar operation using two front orgs, the Center for Technology and Civic Life (CTCL) and the Center for Election Innovation and Research (CEIR) to staff precinct election boards with party shills and buy votes... the thumb drives and modems in the vote-counting machines....

Special Counsel Jack Smith may find it difficult to prove that expressing an opinion about all that is some kind of crime. Meanwhile, he's turned Mr. Trump into the poster boy for the many other aggrieved victims of a government weaponized against its own people. More than half the country sees exactly what's going on and no amount of video footage showing "JB" and Jill holding hands on the beach is going cover for that. We are on the threshold of a king-hell national crisis.

Airplane

Putin to visit Türkiye - Erdogan's office

PutinErdo
© TASS/Kremlin.ruPresident of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan • Russian President Vladimir Putin
Recep Tayyip Erdogan's staff said that an agreement was reached during the phone call with the Russian leader...

Russian President Vladimir Putin is set to visit Türkiye, the office of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced on Wednesday, without naming the specific date.

In a statement, the Turkish presidency said that the two leaders had spoken on the phone, and reached an agreement on a visit by Putin to the country. It added that the presidents also discussed the UN- and Türkiye-mediated grain deal to unblock agricultural exports via the Black Sea. Moscow withdrew from the agreement last month, describing it as a "one-sided game" and pointing to the West's failure to meet its Russia's longstanding demands, including lifting sanctions that hinder its agricultural exports.

According to Erdogan's office, the Turkish president noted the negative impact on poorer countries were the deal to remain indefinitely inactive. He added that Türkiye would "continue to make intensive efforts and pursue diplomacy" to maintain the agreement, the statement said.

Comment: Putin goes against the grain to save the wheat from the chaff.
Following the recent collapse of the UN-brokered Black Sea Grain Initiative, which Putin has refused to renew, he said it unfairly benefited wealthy European countries, and not the hard hit Africa and Middle East populations.

According to a readout, Erdoğan called the grain deal a "bridge for peace". But Putin told his Turkish counterpart that in light of a failure to implement Russia's legitimate concerns, the "next extension had lost its meaning."

Turkish media has noted Russia is escalating its attacks on Ukrainian ports, including grain exports, which Moscow now sees as illicit:
The talks came after Moscow struck Ukraine's grain ports in the wee hours of Wednesday, including an inland port across the Danube River from Romania. sending global food prices soaring as Russia ramps up its use of force to reimpose a blockade of Ukrainian exports.

As a result of the attack, a grain elevator, grain silos and warehouses were damaged or destroyed, prosecutors said.
Erdogan had reportedly urged Putin to avoid escalating attacks on Ukrainian grain further:
"Turkey will keep up with its intense efforts to reinstate the grain deal. Steps that would escalate the tension in the war between Russia and Ukraine should be avoided."