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Bullseye

Vatican office blasts gender theory, questions intentions of transgender people

gender catholic
The Vatican office responsible for overseeing Catholic educational institutions around the world has blasted modern gender theory, claiming in a new document that it seeks to "annihilate the concept of 'nature.' "

In an instruction released June 10 as LGBT people globally are celebrating pride month, the Congregation for Catholic Education calls the idea of people's gender identities existing along a spectrum "nothing more than a confused concept of freedom in the realm of feelings and wants."

Labeling the biological differences between men and women "constitutive of human identity," the office also questions the intentions of those who identify as intersex and transgender.

Comment: As noted in How genetics is proving that race is not necessarily a social construct science is in accord with the position of the Catholic church:
For me, a natural response to the challenge is to learn from the example of the biological differences that exist between males and females. The differences between the sexes are far more profound than those that exist among human populations, reflecting more than 100 million years of evolution and adaptation. Males and females differ by huge tracts of genetic material - a Y chromosome that males have and that females don't, and a second X chromosome that females have and males don't.
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Bullseye

Journalists silent on Assange's plight are complicit in his torture and imprisonment

assange
© Getty Images / Dan Kitwood
When Julian Assange was dragged from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London and arrested by police doing the bidding of the US government, most Western journalists sneered, sniggered, and lined up to publicly wash their hands of him.

Op-eds and think pieces declaring that Assange was "not a journalist" came in thick and fast. Smug hacks belittled his appearance on Twitter. They eagerly shared salacious rumors about his personal habits. Many bought the line that it was his alleged "misbehavior" which prompted Quito to suddenly expel him after seven years - and they defended the Trump administration when it levelled a charge of conspiracy to hack a government computer, arguing that it really wasn't such a big deal. He wasn't in their club, so there was little need to defend him.

This nonchalant response to the arrest of perhaps the most consequential journalist and whistleblower of our time was exactly the one British and US authorities relied upon - and they were not disappointed. The indifference of the media on both sides of the Atlantic to Assange's plight was like a flashing green light for authorities to step things up, which of course they did, announcing 17 new charges in May.

War Whore

Pompeo declares war (again). This time on Her Majesty's Opposition

pompeo
© Reuters / Peter Nicholls
Foreign interference in other people's elections is rightly abhorred by all who care about national sovereignty and the principle of non-interference in other people's internal affairs.

More so surely when the country in question is not just your ally but, as expressed repeatedly by US President Donald Trump on his recent state visit to the UK, your closest ally with whom you are in a "special relationship."

Yet as the president plighted his troth before the Queen in Buckingham Palace last week his Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was secretly pledging to US 'Jewish leaders' that he planned action to stop the leader of Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition, Jeremy Corbyn PC MP ever coming to power. A blatant, brazen and wholly illegal intention to subvert British democracy. It doesn't get much bigger than that.

A recording emerged this week of an "off the record" briefing given to the Jewish leaders in New York.

Arrow Up

Huawei looks to Russian technology to replace Google's Android, testing under way

android
After Google cut Huawei off its Android operating system, the Chinese telecom giant is seeking alternatives to keep its smartphones working. A viable option has reportedly been found in Russia.

Last month, Google and a number of US tech companies were prohibited from dealing with China's telecommunication major Huawei and other Chinese corporations. The direct order by US President Donald Trump bans American firms from supplying Huawei with spare parts or technology solutions. The step was reportedly implemented amid high security concerns after Washington accused Chinese tech companies of spying on behalf of Beijing.

The Chinese corporation is negotiating a replacement for Android with the Aurora operating system, currently being developed by Moscow-based firm Russian Mobile Platform, Russian news outlet the Bell reports, citing an official familiar with the issue.

Comment: The US is losing more battles in the global trade war than it's winning: The unipolar moment is over


Arrow Up

The unipolar moment is over

1936 map of Eurasia
© Flickr/A 1936 map of Eurasia
The Russia-China strategic partnership, consolidated last week in Russia, has thrown U.S. elites into Supreme Paranoia mode, which is holding the whole world hostage.
Something extraordinary began with a short walk in St. Petersburg last Friday.

After a stroll, they took a boat on the Neva River, visited the legendary Aurora cruiser, and dropped in to examine the Renaissance masterpieces at the Hermitage. Cool, calm, collected, all the while it felt like they were mapping the ins and outs of a new, emerging, multipolar world.

Chinese President Xi Jinping was the guest of honor of Russian President Vladimir Putin. It was Xi's eighth trip to Russia since 2013, when he announced the New Silk Roads, or Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

First they met in Moscow, signing multiple deals. The most important is a bombshell: a commitment to develop bilateral trade and cross-border payments using the ruble and the yuan, bypassing the U.S. dollar.

Comment: See also:


Attention

Murdered half-brother of North Korean leader was CIA informant: Wall Street Journal

Kim Jong-nam
© Shin In-seop/JoongAng Ilbo via AP, File
In this June 4, 2010, file photo, Kim Jong-nam, the eldest son of then North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, waves after his first-ever interview with South Korean media in Macau. The murder of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s estranged half-brother
The murdered half-brother of North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un had been a CIA informant and was killed while on a trip to meet his contact person, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday.

Kim Jong-nam had met on several occasions was CIA operatives and "almost certainly" was in contact with other nation's intelligence services, including China's, the Journal reported, citing "a person knowledgeable about the matter."

Kim Jong-nam was killed at a Malaysian airport in 2017 by two women who rubbed his face with a fatal nerve agent, and North Korea was widely blamed.

Comment: CIA informants have a common history of being 'mysteriously' killed. It's just a coincidence that such people are more useful to the CIA dead than alive.


Light Sabers

US Supreme Court rejects challenge to indefinite detention at Guantanamo

Prisoners Guantanamo military prison
© T. McCoy/Handout/Reuters
Prisoners in a holding area at the notorious Guantanamo Bay in Cuba
The Supreme Court on Monday rejected a challenge to the indefinite detention of detainees suspected of terror activities who have yet to be charged after being held for nearly two decades at the Guantanamo Bay detention center.

The case was brought by lawyers for Moath al-Alwi, a Yemeni citizen born and raised in Saudi Arabia, who was in northern Afghanistan on October 7, 2001, when the United States began its post-9/11 military operation. He has been indefinitely detained at the detention center, sometimes referred to as "Gitmo," for 17 years.

"In my judgment, it is past time to confront the difficult question left open" by the Supreme Court's 2004 ruling on who could be detained under the 2001 authorization for use of military force, said Justice Stephen Breyer in a statement. Breyer did not dissent from the court's order but suggested that in a future case, the justices should look carefully at the issue.

"Over the last 17 years, the Supreme Court has largely stayed out of the merits of the Guantanamo cases, stepping in only to assert the role of the federal courts in hearing these disputes, but leaving the substantive legal issues to the lower courts," said Steve Vladeck, CNN Supreme Court analyst and professor at the University of Texas School of Law.

"But with 40 men still in detention there, and with no meaningful indication that that's going to change any time soon, Justice Breyer is, I think quite rightly, suggesting that it's incumbent upon the Court to weigh in on whether the a 2001 statute continues to justify holding these men, potentially in perpetuity."

Attention

US ramps up propaganda ahead of Idlib's imminent liberation by Assad and allied forces

syria memos torture
© Commission for International Justice and Accountability
Memos sent to Syria’s head of military intelligence reporting the deaths of detainees in custody. Some information was blacked out to protect the integrity of evidence for possible prosecutions.
A concerted effort is being made to once again flood Western headlines with now familiar and long-since discredited war propaganda as Syrian forces and their Russian and Iranian allies move in on Idlib in northern Syria to liberate it from US-backed terrorists.

A recent New York Times article titled, "Inside Syria's Secret Torture Prisons: How Bashar al-Assad Crushed Dissent," dusts off, combines, and repackages now nearly 8 years of Western war propaganda aimed at demonizing the Syrian government and paving way for regime change.

While the article claims it now has "memos sent to Syria's head of military intelligence" to back up previous claims, it admits "some information was blacked out to protect the integrity of evidence for possible prosecutions."

Arrow Down

Trump says 50% tariff on US motorcycles by India unacceptable - still too high

TrumpModi
© IANS
US President Donald Trump • Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi
US President Donald Trump said that even though India has reduced its import tariff on American motorcycles from 100 percent to 50 percent, it is still too high and not acceptable to him.

Trump said the United States, under his leadership, is a country that can no longer be fooled.

"We're not the foolish country that does so badly. You look at India, very good friend of mine, Prime Minister (Narendra) Modi, you take a look at what they've done, 100 percent tax on a motorcycle. We charge them nothing," Trump told CBS news in an interview on Monday.

Trump was referring to the import tariff on the Harley Davidson motorcycles, an issue that has been close to his heart and wants India to reduce it to zero.

"So, when Harley sends over there, they have 100 percent tax. When they (India) send in - they make a tremendous number of motorcycles - when they send them in, no tax. I called him. I said it's unacceptable," Trump said, referring to his conversation with Prime Minister Modi.

"He (Modi) reduced it by 50 percent with one phone call. I said it's still unacceptable because it's 50 percent versus nothing. It's still unacceptable. And they're working on it," he said, indicating that the two countries are still in talks to resolve the issue of import tariffs on American motorcycles.

Comment: Not just India (and China... and Mexico...), but France too:
"France charges us a lot for the wine. And yet we charge them very little for French wine," Trump told CNBC during an interview. He said that California winemakers have complained to him about the EU tariffs.

"So the wineries come to me and say 'Sir, we're paying a lot of money to put our product into France, and you're letting' - meaning, this country is allowing - 'these French wines, which are great wines, but we have great wines too - allowing it to come in for nothing. It's not fair,'" said Trump.

He continued: "And you know what? It's not fair. We'll do something about it."
They may actually be right. As much as the French don't like to admit it, it seems that some can't even tell the difference between French and American wines:


More on the great tariff wars of 2019!


Pirates

Western media eulogize Syrian terrorist as 'singer of the revolution' - never mind his ties to ISIS and al-Qaeda

Sarout
© Reuters/Khalil Ashawi
Militants shoot in the air during the funeral of Abdel Basset Sarout in the border town of al-Dana, Idlib, Syria June 9, 2019.
The Syrian conflict continues to provide an uncomfortable window into the minds of the Western establishment, as mainstream media eulogize a dead 'moderate rebel' commander despite evidence of his support for Al-Qaeda and ISIS.

Abdel Baset Sarout, 27, was wounded last week fighting Syrian government forces, and died on Saturday at a hospital in Turkey. Sarout was quickly eulogized in Western press, with an AP profile highlighting his skills as a junior soccer goalie and calling him the "singer of the revolution," while downplaying his ties to terrorists.


Sarout "became an icon of the rebellion against President Bashar Assad," wrote Sarah el Deeb for AP, rehashing the myth of how the Syrian conflict began as "peaceful protests." She paints a flattering portrait of Sarout as a hero of Homs, who "repeatedly denounced rebel infighting and called on Syrians to unite against government forces" and ended up leading a unit named after his hometown after losing his father and brothers in battle.

Comment: Here's another video from 2012 of Sarout singing that classic of the revolution, "Exterminate the Alawites":


And it turns out that the "rumor" that he pledged allegiance to ISIS actually came from... Sarout himself!


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