Puppet Masters
In last year's tumultuous election, all eyes were on the Democrats as they ranted and raved daily about inequities. How it was unfair to ask for voter ID to elect someone to run our entire country, but ok to ask for ID to enter the Capitol, buy alcohol or cigarettes or board a plane. Perhaps it's time to rethink our priorities. But, putting that aside, certain companies, such as FaceBook put millions of dollars into making sure everyone could cast a vote. Of course, the pandemic added an additional layer of necessity, as many would need to find another way to have their vote counted. Cue the Center for Tech and Civic Life, CTCL, who claim its mission is to:
The only problem is that Mark Zuckerberg, and his wife Priscilla Chan, who gave $350 million dollars to CTCL, only helped one side of the aisle. Additionally, the parameters around donation allocation and engagement with the public to ensure voting looked a lot more like a GOTV operation. GOTV, or Get Out the Vote, is a Democrat-led effort that pushes voters strictly along party lines. Since CTCL is a 501c3, and its donations were meant to ensure voter access, regardless of party affiliation, it begs the question, where did all the money go?
Iranian media offered no details on the kind of attack, saying only that the move targeted a sprawling nuclear center located in Karaj city, just some 40 kilometers (25 miles) northwest of Tehran.
When asked for comment, an Iranian official referred to the initial report by Nournews, believed to be close to Iran's Supreme National Security Council. The official spoke on condition of anonymity as they did not have authorization to discuss the matter with media.
The International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations' body that monitors Tehran's atomic program, did not immediately respond to request for comment.
Iranian authorities did not specify which facility in Karaj had been targeted. There are two sites associated with Iran's nuclear program known to be in the area, including the Karaj Agricultural and Medical Research Center.
Iran's Atomic Energy Organization describes the Karaj Agricultural and Medical Research Center as a facility founded in 1974 that uses nuclear technology to improve "quality of soil, water, agricultural and livestock production."
Comment: If Iran's facilities under guard are this vulnerable, what of those in other countries with less provocation?
Speaking at an event being held to mark the 80th anniversary of the Third Reich's invasion of the Soviet Union, veteran leader Alexander Lukashenko raged about the West's response to the incident. Between a quarter and a third of Belarusians are estimated to have died during WWII, the worst proportionate death toll of any country.
Lukashenko, who has faced long-running protests after declaring victory in last year's disputed presidential election, claimed that sanctions imposed since were part of the West's "hybrid war" against the nation.
Speaking on Wednesday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said Tehran deplores the US' efforts to undermine free speech and silence the voice of Iran's independent media.
"Rejecting this illegal and bullying action, the Islamic Republic of Iran will pursue the issue through legal channels," he stressed, slamming the shameful double standards employed by Washington.

Palestinian protesters throw stones toward an Israeli military vehicle spraying a crowd-control weapon known as "skunk" during clashes following a demonstration in the West Bank in 2014.
It is also a weapon available in the United States, supplied by the company Mistral Security, which recommends its use at "border crossings, correctional facilities, demonstrations and sit-ins". Several police departments have already bought it, including in Ferguson, Missouri, following the 2014 protests against police brutality and institutional racism. As Hawari puts it,
"Israeli arms manufacturers do not even have to invest in marketing their weapons; news channels running footage of brutal attacks by the Israeli army do the job for them."

Peter Daszak, who repackaged U.S. government grants and allocated the funds to research institutes including the WIV, arrives there on February 3, 2021, during a fact-finding mission organized in part by the World Health Organization.
Now we know that EcoHealth gave over $600k in taxpayer dollars to The Wuhan Institute of Virology, and even more through grants. The NY Post and Vanity Fair both did reports about these connections, and discovered some troubling connections:
Comment: The New York Post follows up:
The head of a New York City-based nonprofit that directed hundreds of thousands of dollars in federal grant money to the Wuhan Institute of Virology is no longer part of a UN-backed commission examining the origins of the coronavirus pandemic.Peter Daszak has flown under the radar for too long. Atl-media has been onto him for months, but kudos to The New York Post and Vanity Fair for leading the way in the MSM.
EcoHealth Alliance president Peter Daszak's profile on the website of The Lancet COVID-19 Commission has been updated to include the parenthetical quote "recused from Commission work on the origins of the pandemic." The Daily Mail first reported on Daszak's recusal Monday.
Earlier this month, Vanity Fair reported that Dazsak helped organize a statement signed by 27 leading scientists that appeared in The Lancet — a prestigious British medical journal — in February 2020. The statement condemned what it called "conspiracy theories suggesting that COVID-19 does not have a natural origin" and proclaimed "solidarity with all scientists and health professionals in China."
"Conspiracy theories do nothing but create fear, rumours [sic], and prejudice that jeopardise [sic] our global collaboration in the fight against this virus," the statement added.
Though the statement initially claimed that the signatories had "no competing interests," The Lancet issued a statement Monday saying it had invited all 27 signatories (at least one of whom has walked back his support of the natural, or zoonotic, theory) to "re-evaluate their competing interests." The statement included an updated disclosure from Daszak attached to the February 2020 statement and two other pieces he co-authored or contributed to.
In his expanded disclosure, Daszak stated that EcoHealth's work in China — including at the Wuhan lab — was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the US Agency for International Development (USAID). Daszak also denied that he or EcoHealth received money directly from the Chinese government."EcoHealth Alliance's work in China ... includes the production of a small number of recombinant bat coronaviruses to analyse [sic] cell entry and other characteristics of bat coronaviruses for which only the genetic sequences are available," he wrote. "NIH reviewed the planned recombinant virus work and deemed it does not meet the criteria that would warrant further specific review by its Potential Pandemic Pathogen Care and Oversight (P3CO) committee."The belated disclosure from The Lancet comes months after the nonprofit group US Right to Know reported that four of the statement's co-authors had direct ties to EcoHealth Alliance. The Vanity Fair report stated that six signatories had either worked at EcoHealth Alliance or received funding from it.
Two months after The Lancet statement was published, Daszak emailed National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Anthony Fauci thanking him for supporting the theory that the coronavirus naturally jumped from animals to humans and did not leak out of the Wuhan lab.
"I just wanted to say a personal thank you on behalf of our staff and collaborators, for publicly standing up and stating that the scientific evidence supports a natural origin for COVID-19 from a bat-to-human spillover, not a lab release from the Wuhan Institute of Virology," Daszak wrote on April 18, 2020. "From my perspective, your comments are brave, and coming from your trusted voice, will help dispel the myths being spun around the virus's origins."
"Many thanks for your kind note," replied Fauci, who had been told by another email correspondent in late January that the coronavirus may have been "engineered."
The so-called "lab leak" theory, once dismissed by the mainstream media, has gained traction in recent weeks after a series of revelations — most notably that three researchers at the Wuhan lab were hospitalized with possible COVID symptoms in November 2019, the same period when experts believe the virus was spreading through the 11 million-strong city of Wuhan.
Internal NIH emails obtained by the conservative group Judicial Watch earlier this month show that EcoHealth funneled more than $825,000 in grant money to the Wuhan Institute of Virology over a six-year period ending in fiscal year 2019. In total, the Wuhan lab was to receive $1.5 million between fiscal year 2014 and fiscal year 2025 for its work on bat coronaviruses before the grant was terminated by NIH in April of last year.
Daszak has also been scrutinized over his role as the sole US representative on a World Health Organization fact-finding mission to Wuhan earlier this year. That trip produced a report that said the virus likely emerged from animals and that was panned by governments around the world, as well as the WHO's own director general.
Despite his position at the center of the scientific response to the pandemic, Daszak has repeatedly declined to speak to reporters or lawmakers about EcoHealth, the initial WHO investigation, his relationship with Fauci, the Wuhan Institute of Virology or other issues.
- Peter Daszak's EcoHealth Alliance Has Hidden Almost $40 Million In Pentagon Funding And Militarized Pandemic Science
- Busted: Unearthed video shows Peter Daszak describing 'Chinese colleagues' developing 'killer' coronaviruses
- WHO inspector reveals on camera coronavirus was being manipulated in lab before outbreak and that vaccines will not work
- In early 2021, Wuhan Lab DELETED Fauci's NIH and 'gain of function' mentions from archived web pages
In a rare opinion piece in Rodong Sinmun, the official mouthpiece of the Workers' Party of Korea, China's ambassador to North Korea Li Jinjun said the two sides should deepen cooperation in areas such as education, culture, health and agriculture, and expand communication for the "new starting point" in their "enduring and unbreakable" friendship.
"China and North Korea are both countries that have emerged from suffering, and know the value of peace," Li wrote in the piece on Monday, the second anniversary of Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit to North Korea.
Comment: North Korea's positive relationship with China is likely critical to its stability because it has admitted that it is suffering under the US sanctions regime. Meanwhile, significant changes appear to be afoot in North Korea, most notably the party's rules have dropped their 'military-first policy', along with the declaration of the need to "speed up the unification of the fatherland", and this comes amidst rumours of a possible promotion of Kim Jong Un's sister.
See also: EU sanctions Russian, North Korean, Chinese firms over suspected cyberattacks
Russian soldiers blocked the path of a US military patrol in northeastern Syria on Saturday for allegedly violating a security protocol, according to Russian media.
Four US armoured vehicles were turned back along the M4 road, 10 kilometres west of the town of Tal Tamr, Hassakeh province, after Russian troops intervened, state-controlled outlet RT reported, quoting Kurdish sources.
Comment: The US also announced it's plan to withdraw troops from Afghanistan, just 'not entirely': US begins 'withdrawal' from Afghanistan... by sending MORE troops & gear for 'temporary force protection'
See also: US intends to use 'humanitarian aid' shipments to Syrian camp to supply militants destabilizing the region - Russia, Syria report

The Vatican argued in a letter that the bill violates the Concordat, the bilateral treaty between Rome and the Holy See, by curtailing Catholic freedom of belief and expression
The so-called Zan law, currently being debated in Italy's parliament, seeks to punish acts of discrimination and incitement to violence against gay, lesbian, transgender and disabled people.
According to the Corriere della Sera newspaper, the Vatican argued in a letter, or "note verbale", that the bill violates the Concordat, the bilateral treaty between Rome and the Holy See, by curtailing Catholic freedom of belief and expression.
With the UN World Food Program announcing that some 270 million people worldwide now face starvation, the ongoing debate about the real aims of the technocracy is profound. The question is whether their aim tends more towards major population reduction, or more towards a new type of slavery.
It appears that philosophical and long-term practical questions remain a mystery. We will argue that evil, not simply the influence of the base upon the superstructure, is at the core of this endeavor. We have defined evil as inflicting the highest degree of pain upon the greatest number of resisting subjects. In short, we have defined evil as sadism, inflicting evil because it brings satisfaction to those inflicting it.
Because evil is fundamentally a destructive force, it cannot create anything: nothing in it is truly novel nor of use to humanity. Its pleasures are short-lived and spurious. It is unsustainable, self-defeating, ultimately leading to self-destruction.
We have adequately assessed from any number of sources that nefarious interests are behind this process, who seek to make the process also about the exercise of power, in addition to several other aims (remaining in power, exercising power in ways consistent with their occult beliefs about evil, etc.). We understand that they are 'evil' because they involve a type of 'power-over' (as opposed to power-with/consent) which derives this power from fear-mongering and terrorism upon the population. Terrorism here is defined as the operationalized use of fear, pain, and other injury towards socio-political aims.
Had their plans not been rooted in evil, they would have used soft-power tactics like manufacturing consent, to arrive at their ends.













Comment: View the letter on SCRIBD