Puppet Masters
How is a citizenry to respond to Evil, to publicly made threats that they are now in a period where novel viruses, cyberterrorism, and food shortages may strike at any moment?
What about the fact that making threats to achieve political or ideological aims is the very definition of terrorism itself, or the fact that using the internet to do this is the definition of cyberterrorism? When we look at those who have benefited politically and financially from the lockdowns, and who will undoubtedly do the same with the coming cyberterrorism seasons, we are reasonable in asking: Is the World Economic Forum website in fact a terrorist website?
Are the Davos people terrorists? Certainly, the plausible deniability here is that these 'threats' are actually just warnings, warnings that other nefarious actors like the so-called DarkSide, "thought" to be behind the Colonial Pipeline attack, are lurking in the shadows of supposed anonymity may carry out attacks or make threats.
What about the rising phenomenon of censorship, and the taking of political prisoners?
Well how about a bit of wisdom from wiseguys and gangsters, new and old, which goes something like this: those delivering warnings work for those behind the threats.
The debt ceiling suspension put in place under Trump has not been renewed. We are currently more than $6 trillion over it as I type this.
Fungal President Joe Biden stopped looked up from his jello cup long enough to implore Congress to extend the eviction moratorium for those behind on rent and mortgage payments which has been in place for more than a year. Estimates are 6.5 million people will now face eviction who are behind on their rent.
U.S. tax-cows have drawn down their savings at an alarming rate while facing this eviction cliff. But, hey, your per child tax credit is now showing up as a monthly check as long as the Post Office stays on the job. By the way, they are refusing to go along with Biden's plans for forcing all government employees be vaccinated against a virus which isn't killing anyone anymore.
This latest wave of homeless people wandering the streets of the U.S. over the next year will be used by the Democrats and the media (but I repeat myself) to demonize the evil Republicans for not DOING SOMETHING about this new crisis.
Never mind that it was wholly manufactured by locking down parts of the world and blowing up both the financial markets and disrupting the natural flow of goods that is a functional economy.
On the former side, you have that gallery of international villains out of the James Bond playbook: Bill Gates, Klaus Schwab, and George Soros — megalomaniacs armed with mega-money, a sho'nuff recipe for trouble — representing the emergence of a world-saving regime, in concert with lackey national leaderships. Their narrative goes like this:
Humans have over-replicated, like maggots in a trash can, they're wrecking the planet and gobbling (our) resources, and we must find a way to get rid of them that looks like a natural catastrophe so the hidden powers-that-be don't get blamed for pulling a global Auschwitz.Hence Covid-19 and the sketchy vaccinations. ("The Great Reset." You will be dead and you will like it!)
I must say, I don't go for that story, even if that trio have played their parts in some wicked doings du jour. Rather, I subscribe to the latter scenario: the likelihood that we're in a pile-up of quandaries that we can only pretend to manage, and that all our pretenses of control and management only make things worse, while making a mockery of human ingenuity. This does not rule out an element of personal greed and attempted power-mongering, but look, for instance, at where all that has left the hapless Dr. Tony Fauci.
Israel does not rule out acting alone in its 'response' to Iran over the Mercer Street tanker attack, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett has indicated.
"Sitting peacefully in Tehran and igniting the entire Middle East - these times are over. We are working for the world to join us, but at the same time we also know how to act alone. Iran knows the price that we'll exact when someone threatens our security."The prime minister made the comments Tuesday during a visit to the Northern Command. Bennett's remarks come amid growing consolidation among Israel's Western allies in expressing support for Tel Aviv and condemning Tehran over its suspected role in the tanker attack.
Leader of Israel's opposition, Benjamin Netanyahu, slammed the incumbent government for the so-called "no surprises policy" with the United States, lamenting it would potentially thwart Israel's attacks against its rival Iran, Israeli media reported on Monday. Netanyahu, as quoted by The Times of Israel, said:
"The information that is sent to America could be leaked to major media outlets and in this way our operations will be thwarted. That is why for the last decade I have refused the requests of American presidents to always inform them of our actions. This is an existential issue for Israel, in which there may be surprises and sometimes surprises are needed."He also said that the government of Naftali Bennett has "turned us into some sort of protectorate with a duty to report. If we have no independence on this matter, we have no independence at all."
Comment: While it is not beyond belief for Israel to destroy its own assets in order to blame Iran, Bibi has a point. Who would want to bet their state secrets on Joe Biden's reliability?
See also:
Will Israel stop playing and breaking its teeth in the 'Axis of Resistance' playground?

Afghani President Ashraf Ghani
Extraordinary meeting of the Parliament in Kabul, Afghanistan, Monday, Aug. 2, 2021
The US Embassy in the capital Kabul tweeted a statement accusing the Taliban of killing dozens of civilians in the area of Spin Boldak in southern Kandahar province. The statement was also tweeted by the British embassy.
"These murders could constitute war crimes; they must be investigated & those Taliban fighters or commanders responsible held accountable. If you cannot control your fighters now, you have no business in governance later."The tweets, accompanied by calls for a ceasefire, stepped up the United States' public criticism of the group as US troops withdraw and the Taliban goes on the offensive. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said last week that Afghanistan would become a 'pariah state' if any future Taliban rule in Afghanistan resulted in atrocities against civilians.
Comment: The ramifications of quitting a 20-year war in another country's jurisdiction: The aftermath follows you home:
The Afghan president on Monday blamed the American troops' speedy pullout for the worsening violence in his country and said that his administration would now focus on protecting provincial capitals and major urban areas in the face of the rapidly advancing Taliban. Ashraf Ghani also urged lawmakers to back a national mobilization drive against the Taliban.The US rescue net is overflowing with applicants:
"An imported, hasty" peace process — a reference to Washington's push for negotiations between Kabul and the Taliban — "not only failed to bring peace but created doubt and ambiguity" among Afghans, Ghani said in his address to Parliament.
"The Taliban do not believe in lasting or just peace," Ghani said. He predicted a sea change on the battlefield "in the next six months" that would push the Taliban back, without elaborating.
Hours after the president's remarks, Taliban fighters seized control of Helmand province's government radio and TV building in Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital.
On Sunday, the Afghan armed forces spokesman, Gen. Ajmal Omar Shinwari, told reporters that three provinces in southern and western Afghanistan face critical security situations. Southern Kandahar — the birthplace of the Taliban — as well as Helmand and Herat provinces have witnessed several attacks. Helmand provincial council chief Attaullah Afghan said the Taliban now have control of Lashkar Gah's seventh district.
"There has been relentless gunfire, air strikes and mortars in densely populated areas. Houses are being bombed, and many people are suffering severe injuries," said Sarah Leahy, Helmand coordinator for Doctors Without Borders. The group, also known as Médecins Sans Frontières or MSF, said in a statement Monday that life in Lashkar Gah was at a standstill as residents hunker down inside their homes, afraid to venture out.
"Some of our colleagues are staying overnight in the hospital as it's safer, but also so they can keep on treating patients," the organization said. "The situation has been dire for months but now it is even worse [...] Afghan security forces are out of supplies and food in the city."
Back in Kabul, Ghani claimed his government has the financial and political support of the United States and the international community to turn the tide even as he urged the insurgents to rejoin peace talks. "We either sit knee to knee at the real negotiating table or break their (Taliban) knees on the battleground."
The Biden administration on Monday said it is expanding eligibility for at-risk Afghans looking to come to the United States as refugees, citing increased Taliban violence.
Afghans who work or worked for a U.S. government-funded program in Afghanistan or who are current or former employees of U.S.-based media organizations on nongovernmental organizations will now be able to apply through the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program to permanently resettle in the U.S. Those who worked as contractors, interpreters or translators for the U.S. and NATO military operation in Afghanistan but who do not meet the minimum time requirement for a Special Immigrant Visa will also be eligible to apply under a State Department 'Priority 2' designation who are not eligible for a Special Immigrant Visa (SIV)."
The Biden administration will not begin processing applicants until they are outside of Afghanistan and in third countries. It is expected to take between 12 and 14 months to process applicants.
This differs from the approach the administration is taking with respect to applicants for Special Immigrant Visas, some of whom the administration has started evacuating before they complete their applications.
The first group of Afghans departed Afghanistan for the U.S. last week. The group of more than 200 was taken to Fort Lee, Va., where they will complete the SIV application process. They are part of a larger group of 2,500 Afghans, which includes interpreters and their families, who have completed most of the visa application process. An estimated 18,000 applicants and 53,000 family members are already awaiting visas.
Congress authorized 8,000 more visas to the program in a spending package that President Biden signed into law last week.
It's unclear precisely how many more Afghans will be eligible to apply through the U.S. refugee program under the new designation. The senior State Department official told reporters it was likely to be in the tens of thousands but said the administration was unsure of the size.
Speaking as part of a wide-ranging interview with veteran national TV broadcaster Vladimir Solovyov, aired on Sunday, the secret service chief said that relations were still tense with the US despite hope for a recent thaw. "We understand that through the efforts of the American and Western elites and the media, Russia is largely demonized," he said.
Naryshkin pointed out that President Joe Biden has come under fire for "betraying national interests" just for meeting with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, and for not imposing tough new sanctions on the Moscow-backed Nord Stream 2 pipeline. According to him, this demonstrates that anti-Russian sentiment will cling on in Washington regardless of who is in the White House. "You just have to live with this," he added.
The Pentagon Force Protection Agency (PFPA) had confirmed in a tweet that the Defense Department facility was on lockdown, citing an unspecified incident at the Pentagon Transit Center.
The Associated Press reported that multiple gunshots were fired near a platform by the building's Metro station.
It is the first time an independent and official authority has corroborated the findings of an international investigation by the Pegasus project - a consortium of 17 media outlets, including the Guardian. Forbidden Stories, a Paris-based nonprofit media organisation, and Amnesty International initially had access to a leaked list of 50,000 numbers that, it is believed, have been identified as those of people of interest by clients of Israeli firm NSO Group since 2016, and shared access with their media partners.
France's national agency for information systems security (Anssi) identified digital traces of NSO Group's hacking spyware on the television journalist's phone and relayed its findings to the Paris public prosecutor's office, which is overseeing the investigation into possible hacking.
Anssi also found Pegasus on telephones belonging to Lénaïg Bredoux, an investigative journalist at the French investigative website Mediapart, and the site's director, Edwy Plenel.
Forbidden Stories believes at least 180 journalists worldwide may have been selected as people of interest in advance of possible surveillance by government clients of NSO.
A source at France 24 said the broadcaster had been "extremely shocked" to discover one of its staff had potentially been monitored.
"We are stupefied and angry that journalists could be the object of spying. We will not be taking this lying down. There will be legal action," the source said.
Comment:

Father Alaa Ebu Hatab and his 4-year-old daughter Maria, from Ebu Hatab family of 7, are seen as the only two of them survive after their house were destroyed by Israeli last attacks in Gaza City, Gaza on May 31, 2021
The Israeli daily gathered eye-witness testimonies of Palestinian families shelled near the Gaza fence. Details revealed in the report, amount to what may be considered a cover-up by the Israeli army of possible war crimes.
It's claimed that Israeli soldiers "mistakenly" fired shells into an area inhabited by Palestinian farmers, killing a baby, a teenager, and four others. The army never reported the incident, nor did they punish any senior officers.













Comment: Guilt without proof...gets support every time. This is about nixing the revival of the JCPOA. Cui bono?