Puppet Masters
The pandemic is accelerating the dastardly plots of terrorists, according to John Demers, the assistant attorney general for national security at the Justice Department, who shared his fears - and he has a lot of them - with Politico on Friday. Demers warned that terrorists would "take advantage of" certain "windows of opportunities," though he acknowledged that there was no overarching trend.
"Some people are putting off plans, and other people are saying, 'Well I've got to accelerate this because maybe all the borders will be shut down soon,'" Demers explained, covering his bases.
Both US President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence made sure to mention the 'COVID-19 Screening Tool' app developed by Apple at their daily press briefing on Friday. According to the White House, the app "guides users through questions about symptoms and exposure," using guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) "to help determine steps they should take, including testing."
Considering how many Americans use Apple devices - almost 200 million, according to some of the most recent estimates - the app certainly seems like the ideal way for the authorities to identify and track everyone who might be displaying symptoms of the coronavirus.
The MSM puts responsibility onto soldiers, but never those who gave them the orders.
Perhaps it is simply the fact that most journalists see things from a personal perspective that whenever there is a possible war crime (that doesn't serve their own political interests) their outrage and focus lies always on the soldiers themselves. The "bad apples" always take center stage.
Comment: And speaking of war crimes... Mafia: US government threatens families of Int'l Criminal Court staff if they try Americans for war crimes
"They said they were going to give us 40,000 much needed Ventilators, 'very quickly,'" Trump tweeted on Friday. "Now they are saying it will only be 6000, in late April, and they want top dollar."
He added that it's "always a mess" with GM CEO Mary Barra, and that he will invoke the Defense Production Act, a piece of wartime legislation giving the president the power to order manufacturers to produce essential supplies.
"General Motors MUST immediately open their stupidly abandoned Lordstown plant in Ohio," the president's rant continued - referring to the plant GM shuttered after promising him to keep jobs in the US - "or some other plant, and START MAKING VENTILATORS, NOW!!!!!!" Ford should do the same, he added, also in capital letters.
But not everyone has lost out. Jeff Bezos, the world's wealthiest person, is $5.5bn (£4.3bn) richer today than he was at the start of the year. His paper fortune, held mostly in Amazon shares, rose by $3.9bn on Thursday alone to $120bn - enough to buy 188,000 standard gold bars (even taking into account the soaring price of gold).
Bezos, 56, benefited this week from the best three-day stock market rally since 1933 helping Amazon's share price to recover almost all of its losses this month to trade at about $1,920, though that was slightly down on their peak of $2,170 in February. Bezos owns about 12% of Amazon's shares.
Comment: Many insiders got a heads-up from the Secret World Govt. Recall that two US senators were caught trading on inside information about the global lockdown. As in 2008, trillion$ are being given to the banksters. This is another heist, and an attempt to 'reset the global economy' with the few even more firmly fixed atop the pile.
In this article, I take another angle. The CDC has been lying about ordinary flu for decades. So why wouldn't they continue their fine tradition of lying about COV? Why should you believe ANYTHING they say about COV? Why should you accept their case numbers, their ominous warnings, their insistence on lockdowns which wreck economies?
It's simple. If a boy shows up at a grocery store the first six days of the week and steals an apple every time, when he shows up on the seventh day, why wouldn't he steal an apple? And if that boy were the de facto president of the United States — enabling him to impose draconian measures on the population — should you trust him?
The first issue is: how many people in the US die every year from the flu?
The CDC reshuffles its estimates. It used to parrot an annual figure of 36,000. Recently, it claimed 12,000-61,000 deaths per year.
In December of 2005, the British Medical Journal (online) published a shocking report by Peter Doshi, which created tremors through the halls of the CDC.
Here is a quote from Doshi's report, "Are US flu death figures more PR than science?" (BMJ 2005; 331:1412):
"[According to CDC statistics], 'influenza and pneumonia' took 62,034 lives in 2001 — 61,777 of which were attributable to pneumonia and 257 to flu, and in only 18 cases was the flu virus positively identified."Boom.
You see, the CDC created one overall category that combines both flu and pneumonia deaths. Why do they do this? Because they disingenuously assume the pneumonia deaths are complications stemming from the flu.
The New York Times reports nearly 12.2 million people watched Trump's briefing on CNN, Fox News and MSNBC, according to Nielsen — plus millions more on streaming sites, and local news networks. That puts him in the same ratings territory as Monday Night Football, typically the most popular program for a Monday.
Millions of Americans have made the president's daily briefings must-watch television since the coronavirus hit, especially since many of them are in quarantine.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo has followed a similar strategy, turning his grim but compassionate daily updates on the fight against the virus into an event for people on the East Coast.
President Trump continues to spread optimism about beating the virus from the briefing room podium and returning life to normal, despite cautionary talk from government doctors like Dr. Anthony Fauci and Dr. Deborah Birx. Vice President Mike Pence offers comfort and reassurance from the podium, reminding Americans to follow the government recommendations to help stop the spread of the virus.
Comment: Slammed or ignored by MSM, the public disagrees!
The Washington Post has been fiercely critical of Trump since long before his election. Yet as the paper described his administration as barreling "toward calamity" this week, a Washington Post-ABC News poll recorded Trump's highest ever approval rating, with 48 percent of respondents giving the president the thumbs-up, compared to 46 percent disapproving.
That's the first time Trump has scored positively on the Post's poll, but when it comes to his handling of the ongoing pandemic which has killed more than 1,300 Americans thus far, the president's results are even better. Fifty-one percent approve of his stewardship, while 45 percent don't.
The results are played out across the board. Polls from Fox News, the Economist, Reuters, Gallup, Emerson and Axios all show positive results for Trump. Gallup's poll found that 60 percent of Americans support Trump's response to the crisis, while only 38 percent disapprove. Trump's handling of the crisis has translated into a record high job approval rating in an average of national polls.
Yet the media tells a different story. President Trump's daily press briefings are - to quote one NPR station in Seattle - so full of "false or misleading information" that the station will no longer air them.
Staff at CNN and MSNBC have reportedly pleaded with network bosses to drop coverage of the briefings, and the New York Times ran a column on Thursday wondering aloud "should networks cover them?" Individual news personalities have excoriated the president for allegedly spreading baloney. MSNBC's Rachel Maddow said on her show this week that if Trump "keeps lying...it's going to cost lives."
But the public isn't listening. The same Gallup poll whose respondents rated Trump at 60 percent found that out of all the institutions responding to the pandemic, Americans rated the news media the worst, with only 44 percent of Americans expressing any trust in it. Even Congress, a perennially unpopular institution in these kinds of surveys, scored higher than the media.
Describing the virus as an "invisible enemy," Trump told reporters last week that "I view it as a, in a sense, a wartime president." Whether Trump manages to keep the public on side as the death toll climbs, however, depends on his actions in the coming weeks.
According to reports, the unity government of two former rivals will include 78 parliamentarians: 58 will belong to the Netanyahu bloc, 17 - to Gantz's Israel Resilience party, and three to Labour.
The agreement between Gantz and Netanyahu, which hasn't been finalised yet, also presupposes that Netanyahu will lead the country till 2021, with Gantz serving as his deputy and as Israel's foreign minister. Once the year is up, they will swap.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro • Former Panamanian president Manuel Noriega
The Justice Department's indictment of Maduro and four other senior Venezuelan officials on narcotrafficking charges - and the State Department's offer of up to $15 million as a reward for evidence supporting those charges - reminded so many social media users of the 30-year-old plot to remove then-Panamanian president Manuel Noriega from office that the former CIA asset's name was trending on Twitter on Thursday.
Comment: The US is showing its desperation. Nothing has worked this far to dislodge Maduro and neither will this nefarious trajectory.
Washington's decision to indict Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on drug charges is "a new form of coup d'etat," as well as a move to win over hispanic voters in Florida, Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza has claimed. [He] said that the indictments show the "desperation" of the "Washington elite," and their "obsession" with the Latin American country. According to Arreaza, the drug charges are simply "a new form of coup d'etat."See also: US indicts Maduro on 'narco-terrorism' charges
Arreaza added on Thursday that he believes the Justice Department's real aim with the latest indictments is to reap "electoral returns" for Trump in the state of Florida. Southern Florida has the highest population of Venezuelans in the United States, at more than 100,000. The state is also home to more than a million Cuban-Americans, many of whom fled their home country during the rule of Fidel Castro, and hold an unfavorable view of Maduro, an ally of Cuba.
Maduro himself has not yet responded to the charges, but his supporters in the region have condemned Washington for the move. Former Bolivian President Evo Morales - himself removed from power in a coup last year - called the indictments an attempt to "intimidate the legal and legitimate government of Venezuela," with the goal of getting American hands on the country's vast oil reserves.
Former Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa was more colloquial in his condemnation. "Trump really is nuts, or just looking to distract attention from his lousy handling of the health crisis," the ex-leader tweeted.
Nearly three years later, Tedros is facing similar allegations over his response to the novel coronavirus pandemic that originated from China. He and the WHO have come under heavy scrutiny for defending the Chinese government's response to an outbreak in the Wuhan province in November 2019.
A group of American doctors blasted Tedros in September 2017, accusing him of failing to investigate outbreaks of cholera in the African country, which neighbors Ethiopia. Sudanese leaders classified the outbreak as "acute watery diarrhea" rather than cholera, which is caused by a bacteria found in unsanitary drinking water.
Comment: The UK is deflecting responsibility by placing blame on China for any and all manifestations of an unnecessary man-tinkered virus strain from a now-decommissioned lab in the US. Would any Western country have done better in isolating the virus and aggressively treating its people? WHO knows if Tedros made a bad decision in 2017 or did what he was told.














Comment: One can't help but be reminded, after reading this article, of the movie V for Vendetta and the similarities of what's happening right now. Our leaders certainly seem to want us to be reminded why we need them: