Puppet Masters
This name was particularly notable because as part of the justification for adding Timchenko to the list of sanctioned oligarchs, the US Treasury said that "Putin has investments in Gunvor and may have access to Gunvor funds." This is curious because in 2008 The Economist also linked Putin to Timchenko. Timchenko promptly sued but later dropped the case, and The Economist issued a statement. "We accept Gunvor's assurances that neither Vladimir Putin nor any other senior Russian political figures have any ownership in Gunvor."
Yet somehow, despite the repeated denials that Putin has a direct or indirect interest in the massive oil trading company, the Treasury department apparently knows better. As the NYT reports, "Seth Thomas Pietras, Gunvor's corporate affairs director, said Mr. Putin "does not and never has had any ownership, direct, indirect or otherwise, in Gunvor," nor is he "a beneficiary of Gunvor," and "he has no access to Gunvor's funds." After the sanctions statement, Gunvor executives flew to Washington to meet with State Department officials and congressional aides. "We're providing evidence but have not seen any sort of evidence from them yet and don't know if we ever will," Mr. Pietras said. He said the company's banking partners had been satisfied by its explanations.
However, the Journal Star says that Twitter had already suspended the @Peoriamayor parody account before the raid took place and that the only thing police found on site was some marijuana.
The alleged creator of the Twitter account, Jacob Elliott, 36, was charged with one count of marijuana possession but was not charged with any crimes related to the parody account.
The official request for a search warrant filed with the Peoria police reads in part:
"In addition to the creation of the @peoriamayor twitter account, Mayor Ardis discovered that the individual had created 'tweets' impersonating Mayor Ardis. These 'tweets' implied Mayor Ardis utilizes illegal drugs, associates with prostitutes, and utilized offensive inappropriate language."
At least that's what the former Alaskan governor and ex-vice presidential nominee told thousands of attendees this weekend at the National Rifle Association's annual convention in Indianapolis.
"If I were in charge," Palin said Saturday during a Stand And Fight rally at Lucas Oil Stadium, "[our enemies] would know that waterboarding is how we'd baptize terrorists."
Palin mocked what she called the Obama administration's coddling of suspected terrorists.
"Enemies, who would utterly annihilate America, they who'd obviously have information on plots, to carry out jihad," Palin said. "Oh, but you can't offend them, can't make them feel uncomfortable, not even a smidgen." The White House, she said, has failed to put "the fear of God in our enemies."
For Willey, the manuscript theft was déjà vu. Ten years earlier, the former White House aide's life had been turned upside down by threats aimed at silencing her about the sexual assault she experienced at the hands of President Bill Clinton. The Clintons' fears about Willey speaking publicly were heightened by what she knew of their shady political operations. In 2007, with Hillary Clinton in the midst of a campaign to return to the Oval Office - this time as president of the United States - Willey decided to break the silence she had maintained for 10 years. And, as a result, Willey found herself once again a target.
Technically, what the city council of San Juan Capistrano, Calif., did was to vote behind closed doors to ban newspaper racks from city property.
The move, which shocked local journalists, came just four days after one publication, Community Common Sense, which often has been critical of the council majority, placed its news rack alongside others at city hall and the community center.
The council moved swiftly in response by banning all racks.
He had registered only nine receipts with Slovakia's new tax lottery, and yet he had just won a new car. ''It's a heavenly feeling,'' he said before leaving the studio, ready to encourage all of his friends to register their receipts, too -- which is exactly what Slovakian officials were hoping for.
Over the last 10 years, Slovakia's revenue from value-added taxes, a type of sales tax, has declined. But hiring auditors and pursuing individual merchants and service providers in court is expensive and slow. So last fall, the government decided to put a lottery in the mix.
Whether "Big Brother" government bureaucrats have the right to determine what is "truth" will be the focal point of a U.S. Supreme Court hearing Tuesday.
The Susan B. Anthony List is fighting to overturn an Ohio election regulation that allows state bureaucrats to censor statements on election-campaign billboards if they believe they are false.
The case originated in 2010 when SBA List tried to put up billboards to educate the constituents of then-U.S. Rep. Steve Driehaus, D-Ohio, about his vote in support of taxpayer-funded abortion under Obamacare.
Driehaus was one of the key votes for the controversial health insurance law. He had been holding out because he didn't want to support abortion funding but eventually was convinced to support the bill.
The most important of the documents, "The Communication Stream of Conspiracy Commerce," originally some 331 pages, was reduced to only 28 pages in the sanitized and heavily redacted version posted by the presidential library.
"The Communication Stream of Conspiracy Commerce refers to the mode of communication employed by the right wing to convey their fringe stories into legitimate subjects of coverage by the mainstream media," explains the report. "This is how the stream works: Well-funded right wing think tanks and individuals underwrite conservative newsletters and newspapers such as the Western Journalism Center, the American Spectator and the Pittsburgh Tribune Review. Next, the stories are reprinted on the Internet where they are bounced into the mainstream media through one of two ways: 1) the story will be picked up by the British tabloids and covered as a major story, from which the American right-of-center mainstream media, (i.e. the Wall Street Journal, Washington Times and New York Post) will then pick the story up; or 2) The story will be bounced directly from the Internet to the right-of-center mainstream American media. After the mainstream right-of-center media covers the story, congressional committees will look into the story. After Congress looks into the story, the story now has the legitimacy to be covered by the remainder of the American mainstream press as a 'real' story."
These claims were quickly dismissed when it became apparent that no complete bodies were recovered from the passengers or crew of either plane that hit the Twin Towers. Indeed, given the fact that both planes exploded inside the twin towers and then both towers completely collapsed into dust and rubble, it seems highly unlikely that a complete or partial cockpit with a recognizable body inside could have been found. This raises the question of which "law enforcement sources" were spreading this kind of information, that can only have been entirely fabricated, and why.
The answer seems clear; as soon as the 9/11 attacks occurred (or indeed beforehand) a narrative about "hijackers" had already been prepared and disseminated to the mainstream media.

A group of disputed islands, Uotsuri island (top), Minamikojima (bottom) and Kitakojima, known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China is seen in the East China Sea
The tiny islands in the East China Sea have been a source of tension between the two Asian nations. But Obama says they are covered by a bilateral security treaty that would oblige the US to come to Japan's defense if China decided to take the islands by force.
"The policy of the United States is clear - the Senkaku islands are administered by Japan and therefore fall within the scope of ... the U.S.-Japan Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security," Obama said, using the Japanese name for the islands that are known as the Diaoyu in China.
However, Obama's comments did not seem to worry China, with Beijing's Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang saying: "The so-called US-Japan alliance is a bilateral arrangement from the Cold War and ought not to harm China's territorial sovereignty and reasonable rights."













Comment: The Chinese have this one picked. Just another part of the US strategy to contain China, and it comes at the same time as the US signs a treaty with the Philippines, which of course has nothing to do with China but is concerned with being able to provide "humanitarian aid" the the region.