Puppet Masters
The statements are jaw-droppers. The full coverage with subtitles can be seen in a video prepared by journalist David Sheen. (below)
These educators send young men to the army, and have been advocating these ideas for years. They have close ties to lawmakers, specifically to Rabbi Rafi Peretz, now head of the Union of Right Wing Parties, the notorious merger with the Kahanist party Jewish Power, who is now the leading candidate for Minister of Education. The academy is also tied to a Yeshiva, to which many students come after their military service.
The bill prohibits anti-Semitism in Florida public schools and universities, and defines it broadly as any speech that makes stereotypical depictions of Jews, Holocaust denial, inciting of violence or explicit expressions of racial hatred - as well as "criticizing the collective power of the Jewish community."
Such a broad definition could be used to outlaw the pro-Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) Movement, critics have pointed out, arguing that the bill violates the freedom of speech guaranteed by the First Amendment of the US Constitution.
The US-led NATO mission Resolute Support stopped measuring how much of the nation's territory is controlled by the Western-backed government in Kabul, the US special inspector general for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), John Sopko wrote in a quarterly report.
The mission explained its decision to drop the metric by claiming that it was "of limited decision-making value" to its commander. The report further noted that "no other product or forum through district-level control data is communicated to the command."
Sopko, whose job is to oversee the way the US spends money on its military presence in Afghanistan, told Reuters that the command's move is another blow to the already diminished transparency of Washington's policies in the country. "This much is clear: There's even less information for American taxpayers to gauge whether their investment in Afghanistan is a success, or something else."
Iran is building up its gas refinery and transmission infrastructure to significantly expand its gas exports to countries such as Iraq and Turkey, National Iranian Gas Company CEO Hassan Montazer Torbati has said.
"Last year, we exported gas to Turkey, Baghdad and Basra with an average of over 40 million cubic meters a day, and this year, gas exports to Iraq will reach more than 35 million cubic meters per day," Torbati said, speaking to reporters at an energy conference in Tehran on Wednesday.
According to the official, Iran, which has the second-largest proven natural gas reserves in the world, will increase its gas refinery and transmission capacity to over a billion cubic metres a day by February 2020.
The Russian Foreign Ministry on Wednesday called on France to carry out a thorough investigation into the attack on a RIA Novosti correspondent during May Day riots in Paris, saying that the use of violence was unacceptable.
"We consider unacceptable the use of violence against journalists who carry out their professional duties. We urge France to conduct a thorough investigation into the incident. [We also call upon] human rights organizations and NGOs to keep this issue under control," the ministry said in a statement.
Peak globalization has actually already come and gone, according to David Roche, president and global strategist at London-based Independent Strategy.
"The actual reversal of globalization started over seven years ago," well before the rise of U.S. President Donald Trump, as countries worldwide instituted more protectionist policies, Roche told CNBC's "Squawk Box" last week.
In fact, even China - whose leaders are now some of the loudest proponents of global systems - will see most of its future growth come from domestic pursuits, he projected.
Comment: China is hardly just a mere 'proponent of global systems'. It's OBOR project is connecting the poorest regions of the world together that also happen to hold the heavy majority of the world's population. The potential for interconnected growth is immense for China and the near 70 countries participating in the project. What Roche is at pains to admit is that Western globalization is headed down the tubes while China is actually picking up the slack and doing a much better job at it.
Last week's edition of the newspaper ran two news stories (plus an op-ed) on the sinister threat of "red money" - which is like "dirty money" but worse because it comes from Russia and China. One article switches between the perceived threat of Huawei's 5G equipment to British national security and that of having peers with business interests in Russia sitting in Parliament. The other raises the alarm specifically about Russia and a report that seven members of the House of Lords have declared business links with the country.
Comment: Russophobic Tide Rising as Tory Government Fends Off Corbyn And Brexit
As British old-age-pensioners shiver in the bleak midwinter, as millions of our children are revealed by the United Nations to be living in poverty some of them literally going hungry, as a crime and murder wave breaks around our shores we discover that our 4th estate - the media - instead of on all or even any of these things have chosen to cloister instead with their Intelligence "handlers" to obsess about... Russia. And, most ominously, about Britain's Parliamentary Opposition leader, Jeremy Corbyn.See also: Ramping up Russophobia: New UK study finds that every second Russian in London is a spy
The Russophobic tide in Britain has risen in inverse proportion to the country's perceived decline, something which can hardly be hidden, or a co-incidence. One doesn't need to be a psychologist to conclude that this is classic displacement activity. "Look over there" is the new motto on the imperial crest.

Rebel troops, wearing Guaido's signature blue arm bands, attempt to take the La Carlota military base.
"CNN live in Venezuela as Maduro government mows down citizens in streets," Tapper tweeted with a link that leads to a CNN video report starting with an image of a number of army defectors fighting on the side of the opposition. The video includes footage of what appears to be a National Guard truck hitting civilians, but Tapper's tweet implies Maduro is gunning down citizens by using an image of soldiers with weapons.
Late last week, President Trump told Fox News host Sean Hannity that he will declassify "everything" related to the FISA warrant applications used to illegally spy on him and his campaign. When Hannity asked President Trump if he planned to remove the classified status from the FISA applications, the president did not miss a beat before simply saying, "yes." Trump then added, "Everything is going to be declassified and more - much more than what you just mentioned. it will all be declassified." As to why he waited so long to strike back with this move, Trump said, "I'm glad I waited because I thought that maybe they would obstruct if I did it early and I think I was right. So I'm glad I waited and now the attorney general can take a very strong look at whatever it is."
This fits very well with another piece of the puzzle that was also revealed recently.
Sky News reporter Jordan Milne live-tweeted events as they unfolded, reporting that Assange's defense argued that his fears of rendition and torture at the hands of the US government were well-founded. His life in the Ecuadorian embassy and the physical and psychological detriments which came with it were described, including deteriorated health and depression. The judge rejected his entire defense and delivered nearly the harshest sentence possible.
"Your continued residence in the Embassy has necessitated a concentration of resources, and expenditure of £16 million of taxpayers' money in ensuring that when you did leave, you were brought to justice," Judge Deborah Taylor told Assange upon his sentencing.
Comment: Reaction to Assange's sentence was swift. WikiLeaks condemned it as 'shocking & vindictive'

People hold signs during a protest outside Southwark Crown Court, where Julian Assange was sentenced to 50 weeks in prison
WikiLeaks has slammed a UK court's sentencing of its co-founder Julian Assange as "vindictive." It also raised major concerns about whether Assange will be treated fairly during an upcoming extradition hearing.According to former London mayor Ken Livingstone "We should be giving Assange an honor, not arresting him":
The sentence "is as shocking as it is vindictive," WikiLeaks said on Twitter on Wednesday, shortly after Assange received almost a year in prison for violating bail conditions.Julian Assange skipped bail in 2012 while wanted in Sweden over rape allegations (the case was later dropped). The journalist then spent the next several years living under asylum in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, out of fear Britain would hand him over to the US. He was forcibly dragged out of the building last month after the South American nation decided to evict him.We have grave concerns as to whether he will receive a fair extradition hearing in the UK.
The ex-Labour MP claims that the establishment do not want the 47-year-old Australian to get away with exposing the truth. He insists Britain should be doing its best to protect Assange from extradition to the US, adding that he believes UK courts will be reluctant to hand him over to officials stateside.Other commentators weighed in:We should be proud of people doing that... we should be giving people like Assange an honor not arresting them and getting ready no doubt to extradite to the United States of America.














Comment: You must say these pronouns to these people.
You must not say these things about these people.
What could possibly go wrong with the proliferation of proscribed speech?
EVERYTHING.
See also:
Sequence complete? Now gunman opens fire at a San Diego synagogue, on Jewish Sabbath - 1 person dead, 3 injured