Puppet Masters
The data that we do have, meanwhile, could end up being terminally skewed, particularly the data that's been coming out of China.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's guidance on determining COVID-19 as a cause of death isn't going to help those numbers.
Issued March 24, the guidance tells hospitals to list COVID-19 as a cause of death regardless of whether or not there's actual testing to confirm that's the case.
A step‐op is one in which the bad guys keep going, one intrusion after another. It isn't just West Nile, it's West Nile, then SARS, then Bird Flu, then Swine Flu. It"s all one package, with the idea, in this case, that they'll slowly wear down the resistance and people will buy in, will buy the story, the lie. They want people to OBEY. That's the whole essence of this op. OBEY. It isn't only about fake epidemics and getting vaccines. It's about operant training in OBEYING. Get it? In general. Obey us. We command, you go along. ~ Ellis Medavoy in interview with Jon Rappoport, from The Matrix RevealedBy Catherine Austin Fitts
Jon Rappoport has been covering the allegations and events regarding the coronavirus and Covid-19 since they first hit the headlines. Check out his columns at his website NoMoreFakeNews.com.
Jon just recorded three episodes that he wanted to make available to the public. Here they are!
The war industry received 367 distinct deals (contracts or contract modifications) during March 2020, a figure I tallied based upon the Pentagon's public records. This is above average. A typical month of contracting sees between 240 and 350 contracts issued. Salient military contracts issued to the war industry during March included a state-of-the-art logistics system for DARPA, the burial of nuclear reactor components in Washington state, nearly $1 billion on a single day for Lockheed Martin's THADD, plenty of missiles, science & technology operations and support for the Defense Intelligence Agency, and $4.9 billion on a single day for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter boondoggle.
Comment: See also:
- Yemen's Houthi militia accuse Saudi-led coalition of weaponizing coronavirus
- From cluster bombs to toxic waste: Saudi Arabia is creating the next Fallujah in Yemen thanks to American weapons
- Hundreds of US and UK troops arrive in southern Yemen
- Saudis 'intercept missiles fired from Yemen' as Pompeo tours kingdom with 'Iranian threat' show & promotes US air defenses
- UN report says "unlikely" Yemen responsible for Saudi oil attack, Iran slams US' baseless accusations
- Houthis accuse France of supplying weapons used in Saudis' deadly market attack in Yemen
We stand by hoping that it will work to reflate markets collapsing from a catastrophic mispricing of assets. At least some of us do. I don't.
I hope it fails and it's because those inflated prices fuel the very global political order that is anathema to human advancement.
President Trump is finally happy with his FOMC chair, Jerome Powell, after he opened the door to unlimited quantitative easing, nearly unlimited liquidity injections via the repo markets, and taking interest rates to the zero-bound.
It's clear that the Keynesians at the Fed and the U.S. Treasury Dept. have no answers to the problems in front of them. They are simply doing what they always do when a crisis hits. Print money and hope someone still believes the new money is worth buying.
The sudden supply and demand side shock to the global economy thanks to the COVID-19 coronavirus is outside of their frame of reference.

Pump jacks operate in front of a drilling rig in an oil field in Midland, Texas.
The so-called 'Shale Revolution' in the US in recent years has deprived the Saudis of a huge chunk of the American oil market, but Riyadh is now using the coronavirus crisis to win back its lost position.
After failing to find common ground with Russia on how to respond to the pandemic, Saudi Arabia began pumping oil at such an intense rate that the prices saw the sharpest drop, unseen since the Gulf War in 1991.
Comment:
- Empire of Illusions: Washington's shale boom, fuelled by Wall Street cheap money, going bust
- US shale producers have $150bn in debt - prices too low to sustain production
- US-Russia agree to oil talks; Trump says price war is 'crazy'
- In the "Oil War", Washington's survival meant blinking first
Russia's dominance of the EEU is both a positive and a negative for Eurasian integration. Russia's large market forms the basis of the integration potential of the EEU, however, limited economic growth, sanctions and its participation in global geopolitics create risks for the Eurasian integration process. However, Eurasian integration would be in the interest of EU as it will connect European states to new markets in Central and East Asia far more efficiently and quickly then by other means. The EU claims that it works towards common markets and efficiency but does not seriously consider connecting Lisbon on the Atlantic Ocean to Vladivostok on the Pacific Ocean.
The EU is losing its position as a top trading partner of the EEU, and it's not just because of China's growing importance. As a trading partner of the EEU, China has already surpassed most of Europe. The role of the EU as a trading partner of the whole EEU is due to the important role of the EU for Russia. However, Russia has been slowly turning eastward from the EU for years now as the future leading economies of the world will shift from the West to Asia.

Michael Atkinson, the inspector general of the intelligence community, leaves the Capitol after closed doors interview about the whistleblower complaint that exposed a July phone call the president had with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, at the Capitol in Washington, Friday, Oct. 4, 2019.
Trump formally notified the intelligence committees of both the Senate and House in a letter dated Friday. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., posted the letter online.
"This is to advise that I am exercising my power as President to remove from office the Inspector General of the Intelligence Community, effective 30 days from today," the president wrote.
Comment:
- ICIG Michael Atkinson, top Mueller hoax operative, turned in the partisan CIA whistleblower complaint
- IG Atkinson can't explain 18-day window between Trump's Ukraine call and whistleblower complaint
- Devin Nunes: 'Republicans have active investigation into (IG Michael) Atkinson' for his whistleblower complaint
Starmer, a former director of public prosecutions who was known for a forensic attention to detail when opposing the country's exit from the European Union, won with 56% of the vote.
The comprehensive defeat of an ally of the outgoing leader Jeremy Corbyn, and the election of Angela Rayner as Starmer's deputy, heralds the end of the party leadership's embrace of a radical socialism that was crushed in the December election.
Starmer, who takes over immediately, said he would work constructively with government when it was the right thing to do, while testing Conservative Prime Minister Boris Johnson's arguments and challenging the failures.
Facts matter less than our ache for an unpolluted globe. We yearn for a lost world of childhood innocence, and so project our hope onto juvenile activists. But there clearly are benefits in the reduced use of fossil fuels as flights are cancelled and car journeys shrink to levels last seen on distant Sundays when the shops were shut. Some are reporting easier breathing during an epidemic which attacks the lungs.
Surely this will strengthen the current insistence to turn thirty, even fifty, percent of the globe into "protected areas" (PAs)? We're told this is the answer to climate chaos and protecting biodiversity - no people, no pollution, problem solved?













Comment: Here it is in black and white. The CDC is artificially inflating the mortality rate of COVID-19 by telling hospitals to not look at ambiguity or other factors involved in death. The result will of course is to see the mortality rate increase. This is undoubtedly the gas that fuels hysteria in the public to implement further controls.
There is a profound difference between a definitive cause of death and acknowledging equally contributing and/or existing factors. How these determinations are reported determines this layer of patient history forever. Considering the volume of cases involved, there will unlikely be a second review to separate out the causes of death in order to gain a perspective that is factually useful going forward. No need, indeed, considering this experiment is a PSYOP.