Puppet Masters
Biden's first 100 days in office have been busy. A slew of executive orders did away with nearly all of Donald Trump's policies as the Democratic president opened up the country's Mexican border, launched a bid for gun control and banned key fossil fuel projects. The coronavirus vaccine rollout continues at home, while internationally, Biden has hit Russia with economic sanctions and strained relations with Turkey by recognizing the Armenian genocide.

Kamala Harris's children's book will be given to migrant children coming to Long Beach.
Unaccompanied migrant kids brought from the U.S.-Mexico border to a new shelter in Long Beach, Calif., will be given a copy of her 2019 children's book, Superheroes are Everywhere, in their welcome kits.
It's just the latest open-arms gesture by the Biden administration, whose mixed messaging regarding the border and immigration has been credited with the surge from Central America to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) speaks outside of the Democratic National Committee headquarters on November 19, 2020 in Washington, D.C.
"The Biden Administration and President Biden have definitely exceeded expectations that progressives had," Democratic Socialist Ocasio-Cortez said during a virtual town hall meeting.
"A lot of us expected a much more conservative administration."
Comment: Conservative now means anything to the left of AOC and Karl Marx. If you're not a member of the progressive ruling class cult, that makes you a 'conservative.' And when they say it, it's an insult, by the way.
Ocasio-Cortez gave Biden her leftist seal of approval largely based on his actions in pushing through the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 stimulus package, known as the American Rescue Plan.
She said his willingness to show flexibility in negotiations has been "very impressive" and led to the passage of "progressive legislation."
"It's been good so far," the congresswoman said.
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In mid-February, Daniel Baker, a US veteran described by the media as "anti-Trump, anti-government, anti-white supremacists, and anti-police," was charged by a Florida grand jury with two counts of "transmitting a communication in interstate commerce containing a threat to kidnap or injure."
The communication in question had been posted by Baker on Facebook, where he had created an event page to organize an armed counter-rally to one planned by Donald Trump supporters at the Florida capital of Tallahassee on January 6. "If you are afraid to die fighting the enemy, then stay in bed and live. Call all of your friends and Rise Up!," Baker had written on his Facebook event page.
Baker's case is notable as it is one of the first "precrime" arrests based entirely on social media posts — the logical conclusion of the Trump administration's, and now Biden administration's, push to normalize arresting individuals for online posts to prevent violent acts before they can happen. From the increasing sophistication of US intelligence/military contractor Palantir's predictive policing programs to the formal announcement of the Justice Department's Disruption and Early Engagement Program in 2019 to Biden's first budget, which contains $111 million for pursuing and managing "increasing domestic terrorism caseloads," the steady advance toward a precrime-centered "war on domestic terror" has been notable under every post-9/11 presidential administration.
Comment: It is also no coincidence that the Atlantic Council - NATO's policy and propaganda think tank - has its hooks so deeply entrenched in FB:
- Atlantic Council - the four person NATO-funded team who advises Facebook on "propaganda"
- Threats to freedom: Facebook's Atlantic Council censors are more interested in tanks than thinking
- Inspired by the Atlantic Council and Ben Nimmo, Facebook deletes Craig Murray's posts since July 2017 - apparently cause he's a 'Russian bot'

Review: Securing Democracy: My Fight for Press Freedom and Justice in Bolsonaro's Brazil. Haters gonna hate, but Glenn Greenwald's latest is a field guide to bringing home (another) scoop of a lifetime
On Twitter, where he has 1.6 million followers, it's worse. Greenwald is coming off a streak of trending six times in six weeks, accused of everything from transphobia to grooming children. Few non-Trump figures on Twitter generate this level of crowdsourced fury; there are too many attack lines to count. One of the more popular is the idea that he's "just an opinion writer" who doesn't do any "real reporting":

This March 27, 2008, file photo, shows the Pentagon in Washington. After weeks of wonder by the networking community, the Pentagon has now provided a very terse explanation for why it hired a shadowy company residing at a shared workspace above a Florida bank to manage a colossal, previously idle chunk of the internet that it owns. Many basic questions remain unanswered, beginning with why it chose for the task a company that seems not to have existed until September.
That real estate has since more than quadrupled to 175 million addresses — about 1/25th the size of the current internet.
"It is massive. That is the biggest thing in the history of the internet," said Doug Madory, director of internet analysis at Kentik, a network operating company. It's also more than twice the size of the internet space actually used by the Pentagon.
Comment: To call this mystery 'partially solved' seems like a misnomer. Nothing about this mystery is solved.
The report analyzes countries by projected population size, GDP, defense budget, and more.
In it, they predict a 70% reduction in the size of the United States population. This is a bold prediction. What are your thoughts on this?
Doug Casey: I've got to say that I wasn't familiar with Deagel — it keeps a low profile. Deagel is in the same business as Jane's — which has been in the business of analyzing weapons systems for many decades.
A look at the Deagel website, which is quite sophisticated, makes it clear we're not dealing with some blogger concocting outrageous clickbait. It seems to be well-connected with defense contractors and government agencies like the CIA.
Comment: On this point:
"What if the real problem is the new vaccines. What if, after X number of months or years, they turn out to have very deadly effects?" - Don't miss the following:
Such behavior on the West's part is hardly surprising, the Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman explained to Thomas Fasbender in an exclusive interview, given the efforts that Western counties have put into painting Moscow as an "aggressor" over the years.
The consistently cold relations between the West and Russia have been heightened by a series of major scandals recently, she outlined, despite these being based on imaginary grounds. For instance, military drills in Russia's southeast have prompted hysteria in multiple NATO countries and a fresh wave of doomsday predictions regarding an impending war between Russia and Ukraine - which, again, did not happen.
Comment:
- Czechs announce expulsion of 18 Russian diplomats, as Prague claims 'intel officers' involved in 2014 munitions depot explosion
- Russia tells 20 Czech diplomats to leave by Monday night in response to Prague's expulsions
- Are the Brits behind Czechia's surprise decision to expel Russian diplomats?
- WHO thanks Russia for developing "safe and effective" vaccine
- After months of bashing Russia's vaccine, Western journalists in Moscow line up for Sputnik V
- Over 5,000 Russians have taken world's first Covid-19 vaccine, none have reported serious side effects
- Covid propaganda games: Nasty Russian needles & brave British grannies!
"Politicians, Priests, and psychiatrists often face the same problem: how to find the most rapid and permanent means of changing a man's belief...The problem of the doctor and his nervously ill patient, and that of the religious leader who sets out to gain and hold new converts, has now become the problem of whole groups of nations, who wish not only to confirm certain political beliefs within their boundaries, but to proselytize the outside world."It is rather ironic that in this "age of information", we are more confused than ever...
-William Sargant, Battle of the Mind
It had been commonly thought in the past, and not without basis, that tyranny could only exist on the condition that the people were kept illiterate and ignorant of their oppression. To recognise that one was "oppressed" meant they must first have an idea of what was "freedom", and if one were allowed the "privilege" to learn how to read, this discovery was inevitable.
If education of the masses could turn the majority of a population literate, it was thought that the higher ideas, the sort of "dangerous ideas" that Mustapha Mond for instance expresses in The Brave New World, would quickly organise the masses and revolution against their "controllers" would be inevitable. In other words, knowledge is freedom, and you cannot enslave those who learn how to "think".
However, it hasn't exactly played out that way has it?











Comment: Government funds paid for Kamala's "book," with no disclosure of who is profiting from the purchase. That has to be all kinds of illegal.
Fox News reports: