Puppet Masters
"The UAE, from now on, will put all its political and diplomatic weight behind resolving the crisis and establishing peace for the people of Yemen," the senior Emirati figure underlined in his post.
In response to Abdullah's tweet, Ania El Afandi, an Algerian journalist, posted a tweet asking the Emirati figure why the UAE did not put its political weight, from the very outset, behind efforts for materializing peace. Then the Arab journalist questioned the game-over rhetoric of Abdullah, asking:
"War should come to an end officially, are your words addressing Saudi Arabia? Thirdly, will the blockade against Qatar be lifted if issues with Iran are solved?" she concluded.
The article's author, Josh Rogin, has been a cheerleader for US regime change interventionism in Syria since the very beginning of the conflict in that nation. It is unsurprising, then, that he reacted with orgasmic exuberance when Harris retaliated against Gabbard's devastating attack by smearing the Hawaii congresswoman as an "Assad apologist", since Gabbard has been arguably the most consistent and high-profile critic of Rogin's pet war agenda. His article, titled "Tulsi Gabbard's Syria record shows why she can't be president", is one of the most dishonest articles that I have ever read in a mainstream publication, and the fact that it made it through The Washington Post's editors is enough to fully discredit that outlet.
You can read Rogin's smear piece without giving Jeff Bezos more money by clicking here for an archive. There's so much dishonesty packed into this one that all I can do is go through it lie-by-lie until I either finish or get tired, so let's begin:
Today on MindMatters, we look at the Czech "Dictionary of Totalitarianism", a project by several Czech academics analyzing the vocabulary of propaganda during the socialist period in Czechoslovakia. Using statistical analysis, the researchers were able to identify which words came into prominence and attached with that suggestive, emotional flavor typical of totalitarians and pathocrats, the euphemisms and stereotyped phrases, and the slurs used to demonize political enemies. We also look at a more modern text of revolutionary and potentially totalitarian ideology, The Anti-Fascist Handbook.
Running Time: 01:06:53
Download: MP3 — 61.2 MB
Don't worry, you're not the only one. There have been any number of developments in the last few weeks alone that feed into this narrative.
There was the tit-for-tat tanker seizures between Britain and Iran last month (with the MSM memory holing Britain's tit in the reporting on Iran's tat, of course), which has enabled the always-insightful Russian Foreign Ministry to conclude that the US "is simply looking for a pretext to whip up the situation" in the Persian Gulf (shocking, I know).
There is the still-escalating situation in Hong Kong, where US-backed regime change NGOs and authentically angry Hong Kongers are struggling against Beijing's encroachment on their regional autonomy (with China now warning the US to mind its own beeswax in the matter).
There was the incident over South Korea late last month where, depending on whose side of the story you trust, South Korean forces fired warning shots on Russian military aircraft that violated their airspace or innocent Russian peace planes were totally not violating anybody's airspace and no shots were even fired.
Oh, and there's the breaking news story as I write this article about the US formally withdrawing from the INF nuclear treaty, a Cold War-era arms control deal that had hitherto limited development of mid-range ground based nuclear missiles.
Yes, it's safe to say that the world is beginning to feel like a powder keg and each one of these incidents is a lit match.
But as bad as all of these stories sound, the reality is even worse! Let's take a look at a few recent developments that demonstrate how the world's biggest powers are prepping for something huge.
In the most complete account yet of CTF Partners' outlook and strategy, current and former employees of the campaign consultancy have painted a picture of a business that appears to have professionalised online disinformation, taken on a series of controversial clients and faced incidents of misogynistic bullying in its headquarters.
They said that such was the culture of secrecy within the firm that staff working on online disinformation campaigns, which selectively promoted their clients' viewpoints on anonymised Facebook pages that followed a common formula, used initials rather than full names on internal systems and often relied on personal email accounts to avoid their work being traced back to CTF and its clients.
"We've been speaking with Russia about the pact for nuclear," Trump told reporters outside the White House on Friday, adding that "China is very excited about it" too.
This is not the first time the US president has brought up the ambitious nuclear weapons reduction plan. He first referenced it in April, arguing that the ultimate goal is to "get rid" of as many nuclear weapons as possible.
In practice, however, the Trump administration has poured billions of dollars into modernizing the US nuclear arsenal and Pentagon doctrines on the use of atomic weapons, while scrapping the landmark 1987 INF arms control treaty that kept the peace in Europe for over 20 years.
Comment: Additional from RT 3/8/2019: 'No winners' in INF collapse, but Russia 'will never lose an arms race' either!
Deputy FM Sergey Ryabkov: "The US withdrawal from the INF treaty jeopardizes everyone's security and may cause an arms race, but the US shouldn't count on winning it. The US decided to untie itself from an arms control treaty that kept their capabilities in this area at zero level for decades. No one will gain from the collapse of the INF. Everyone's security will be in jeopardy. Russia will never lose in this arms race. We have shown earlier our ability to find cost effective answers to any challenges we face."See also:
Russian President Vladimir Putin has said that it would make no sense to compete with the US in the number of missiles and that parity should instead be achieved by producing a limited number of state-of-the-art hardware that surpasses American capabilities.
- Bolton: We're sticking to it, US to file INF Treaty withdrawal
- Develop missiles or seek 'better' deal? Trump sends mixed signals to Russia over INF treaty
- Is the American suspension of INF Treaty aimed at China?
- Beijing slams Trump's plan to ditch 'crucial' INF treaty, bodes 'multilateral negative effect'
- UN warning: EU to be most affected by possible INF treaty collapse
- Trump's INF withdrawal is a Deep State dream & global nightmare
Despite a Western media deliberately feigning confusion over motives and possible suspects while attempting to depict the capital as "in chaos" and the current Thai government "humiliated" - its image "tarnished" - US-backed opposition groups are the prime suspects, their motives including growing desperation.
Also absent from Western media coverage was any genuine context surrounding Thailand's ongoing political crisis as foreign-backed opposition groups attempt to reverse the nation's growing ties with China, Russia, and developing nations across Eurasia.
The cost of special counsel Robert Mueller's 22-month probe was released in a Justice Department accounting report on Friday. While the last six months of the investigation, which concluded in May with Mueller's resignation, cost "only" $6.5 million as he began sending prosecutors home and writing up the 448-page report, turning the full force of the country's investigative apparatus against a president and his campaign isn't cheap. From May 2017 to September 2018, the special counsel's office spent $25 million digging for Russian infiltrators in the White House.
Some $2.4 million of the last phase's expenses would have been spent anyway on Department salaries, according to the report, but the itemized breakdown provides an interesting window into the bureaucratic swamp that produced the pricey nothingburger. "Transportation of Things" may have cost just $229, but Justice Department employees billed the government for $235,812 to work out of the special counsel's office instead of their own offices (filed under "Travel and Transportation of Persons").
Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Chairman Ron Johnson forecast the 1.1 million figure during a committee hearing Tuesday based off the number of people arrested for illegally entering between border crossings and those who presented at ports of entry but were deemed ineligible for admittance.
As of June 30, U.S. Customs and Border Protection personnel had made contact with 905,926 migrants, including 694,229 who entered the country without permission. The 694,229 figure nine months into fiscal 2019 was more than double the 310,000 who illegally crossed the southern border in all of fiscal 2017.
This year's number has already surpassed the 683,178 encountered both at ports of entry and between ports in fiscal 2018.
Comment: See also:
- Mexico to deploy National Guard forces to southern border to stem flow of Central American migrants
- Despite Obrador's promises, migrants flow through borders with nary a Mexican National Guard trooper in sight
- Leftist open borders Activists are organizing the illegal alien caravan
- Arrests at US southern border skyrocketing: 144,000 apprehensions in May
- Border Patrol Agent: The best way to end to the humanitarian crisis on our southern border is Trump's wall

Jesse Ventura talks to RT's Lee Camp on "Redacted Tonight"
After leaving office in 2003, Ventura began a weekly cable TV show, Jesse Ventura's America, on MSNBC. However, the show was dropped only a few months after it began. For Ventura, the show was canceled for one reason.
"They got rid of me because I opposed the invasion of Iraq," he told Redacted Tonight's Lee Camp. "Our government allowed no media at all to speak out against the invasion of Iraq, you were told it's off limits basically." While dissent may not have gone down well at MSNBC at the time, jingoism did, with host Joe Scarborough calling protesters "leftist stooges for anti-American causes," and pundit Michael Savage suggesting they "are absolutely committing sedition, or treason."
Watch the full video, also featuring corporate journalists finally turning on each other for two years of 'Russiagate' conspiracies and America's need for a viable third party.














Comment: See also: "Unwinnable": UAE withdrawing from Saudi-led war on Yemen