Welcome to Sott.net
Wed, 13 Oct 2021
The World for People who Think

Puppet Masters
Map

Light Saber

Czech Supreme Court overrules Health Ministry's mask mandate following failure to provide evidence

Czech mask
© AFP / Michal Cizek
FILE PHOTO. Prague, Czech Republic.
The Czech Supreme Administrative Court (NSS), the country's highest authority over executive actions, overruled the Health Ministry's mask mandate on Tuesday, declaring the measure unjustified and threatening to cancel it.

In a statement posted to the court's website, the NSS issued a final judgement warning that the Health Ministry's rule ordering the wearing of masks in buildings and on public transport in the Czech Republic will be cancelled within three days if the ministry does not provide sufficient justification for the measure.

So far, the NSS claims the ministry has been "systemically ignoring" its decision, despite the court having the final say over executive actions taken by the Czech government.

Comment: Conditions on our planet are such that the concerted, nefarious actions of governments everywhere has turned our lives into one big life threatening experiment, and, thanks to certain defiant states in the US as well as countries like Sweden, the data very clearly shows that lockdowns, restrictions, masks and experimental vaccines actually cause more death than the relatively harmless coronavirus ever could:


Wolf

'Like petrol cars': Tobacco firm Philip Morris calls for BAN on cigarettes by 2030 as company bids for British asthma inhaler company

Olczak
© APZoe Wood
Jacek Olczak said the company could 'see the world without cigarettes ... and actually, the sooner it happens, the better it is for everyone'.
The chief executive of tobacco business Philip Morris International has called on the UK government to ban cigarettes within a decade, in a move that would outlaw its own Marlboro brand.

Jacek Olczak said the company could "see the world without cigarettes ... and actually, the sooner it happens, the better it is for everyone." Cigarettes should be treated like petrol cars, the sale of which is due to be banned from 2030, he said.


Comment: The CEO of a multibillion dollar company thinks outlawing cigarettes would be better for whom? Is there anything in his job that qualifies him to know what's best for 'everyone'? Also, what's with 2030? Why are the establishment so eager to wipe out civilization and society as we know it in the next decade? The Greta Reset: Welcome to the UK 2030 - the no petrol, no transport, no freedom of movement Net Zero future


Comment: Note that, whilst the CEO makes these claims, everyday him and the company are massively profiting from tobacco sales, and that money is going into other investments and to pay shareholders; one gets the impression that he may not feel as strongly nor be as altruistic as he's trying to make out. This hypocrisy and the concerted effort of governments worldwide to remove freedom of choice reveals that there's more to tobacco prohibition than meets the eye; because these are the same governments that want us to eat bugs instead of beef and 'own nothing and be happy': For more on the matter, check out SOTT radio's: The Health & Wellness Show: The Truth about Tobacco and the Benefits of Nicotine


MIB

Meet Toka - The Most Dangerous Israeli Spyware Firm You've Never Heard of

Meet Toka
The mainstream media's myopic focus on Israel's Pegasus spyware and the threats it poses means that other companies, like Toka, go uninvestigated, even when their products present an even greater potential for abuse and illegal surveillance.

This past Sunday, an investigation into the global abuse of spyware developed by veterans of Israeli intelligence Unit 8200 gained widespread attention, as it was revealed that the software - sold to democratic and authoritarian governments alike - had been used to illegally spy on an estimated 50,000 individuals. Among those who had their communications and devices spied on by the software, known as Pegasus, were journalists, human rights activists, business executives, academics and prominent political leaders. Among those targeted political leaders, per reports, were the current leaders of France, Pakistan, South Africa, Egypt, Morocco and Iraq.

The abuse of Pegasus software in this very way has been known for several years, though these latest revelations appear to have gained such traction in the mainstream owing to the high number of civilians who have reportedly been surveilled through its use. The continuation of the now-years-long scandal surrounding the abuse of Pegasus has also brought considerable controversy and notoriety to the Israeli company that developed it, the NSO Group.

While the NSO Group has become infamous, other Israeli companies with even deeper ties to Israel's intelligence apparatus have been selling software that not only provides the exact same services to governments and intelligence agencies but purports to go even farther.

Network

South and North Korea restore hotline after a year on hold

korea
© Park Tae-Hyun/Korea pool/AFP/Getty Images
South Korea's unification minister Lee In-young (R) visits the hotline in September last year during a visit to the south side of the truce village of Panmunjom.
South and North Korea have restored their once-severed hotlines as part of efforts by the two countries' leaders to rebuild strained ties, Seoul's presidential Blue House said on Tuesday.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un have exchanged multiple letters since April and agreed to reconnect the hotlines, said Moon's press secretary, Park Soo-hyun.

North Korea's state media outlet, KCNA, also said all inter-Korean communication channels resumed operation at 10am Tuesday (0100 GMT) in line with an agreement between Moon and Kim.

Comment: That's potentially a positive development for North Korea in particular considering the country's recent struggles, and the rumours of possible succession:


Sherlock

Myanmar military opposition cancels results of 2020 polls won by Suu Kyi's party, claim 11 million cases of election fraud

San Suu Kyi

Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party trounced the military-aligned opposition in the vote
Myanmar's junta on Monday cancelled the results of 2020 polls won by Aung San Suu Kyi's party, announcing they were not "free and fair" almost six months after deposing the Nobel laureate in a coup.

Investigations had uncovered more than 11 million cases of fraud in the elections in which Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy trounced the military-aligned opposition, the junta's election commission said.

"They (the NLD) attempted to take state power from non-NLD parties and candidates by misusing Covid-19 restrictions," said commission chairman Thein Soe.

Comment: The Asian Network for Free Elections leads back to the UN.

See also:


Black Magic

'Alcohol tags', increased stop and search: UK govt's new draconian proposals will 'divide communities'

uk police stop search

Government's proposals include more frequent stop and search and making community service street cleaners 'more visible'
MPs and campaigners have sounded alarm at a series of proposals in the government crime reduction plan, including more frequent stop and search, a trial of "alcohol tags" and criminals undertaking "visible" community service cleaning streets.

Liberty said the permanent relaxation of search powers would "compound discrimination in Britain and divide communities" and the former shadow home secretary, Diane Abbott, said it was "alarming and counter-productive."

Labour said the policy was a "rehash" of a number of preannounced proposals and expansions of existing pilots.


Comment: Schemes that were trialed on an 'underclass' - obviously with few objections - are now being rolled out to the wider public, despite them clearly being ineffective at best.


Comment: One wonders whether these increased stop and search powers will be used in conjunction with the impending vaccine passport restrictions?

Further, is this yet more legislation that is being rammed through parliament that will increase the already dystopian living conditions citizens are suffering under? Isn't it rather suspicious that, whilst governments claim the world is experiencing a 'deadly pandemic', governments also seem to be pushing through laws with little to no real debate that will drastically change society, and that just happen to snatch freedoms from citizens and gift them with even more power?


Bullseye

The scandal of foreign interference in Washington is not Russiagate, but UAE-gate. Democrats don't care because it's not Putin

Thomas Barrack
© Henry Romero
Thomas Barrack
The revelation that a close aide of President Trump was allegedly an agent of the United Arab Emirates shows just how clever Abu Dhabi's been at restructuring America's Middle East foreign policy. Where's the outcry?

Thomas Barrack, indicted last week for alleged illegal lobbying on behalf of the United Arab Emirates, was a close aide, inaugural committee head and fundraiser for former US President Donald Trump. Barrack is currently out of jail on a 250 million dollar bond, secured by five million in cash, and has attracted quite a lot of attention for his alleged influence on the Middle East policy of the former president.

Barrack was also only one among three men charged with working to influence Donald Trump's foreign policy in the lead up to the 2016 presidential elections. Along with conspiracy, he was charged with obstruction of justice and lying in an interview with law enforcement. Also charged was Matthew Grimes, a former executive at Barrack's company, who got a seven-count indictment; and Rashid al Malik, a wealthy businessman from the UAE who supposedly worked as a direct connection to the regime's ruler.

Beaker

Syrian insurgents guilty of 'red line' 2013 sarin chemical attack, current study finds

ObamaSyria
© wordpress/KJN
A new open-source study concludes that Syrian insurgents carried out the Ghouta sarin chemical attack in August 2013. The explosive findings add to a growing body of public evidence that undermines US-led efforts to blame the Syrian government, which almost led to US military intervention.

Hundreds of people were killed and thousands were wounded when sarin rockets hit multiple sites in the Syria area of Ghouta on August 21, 2013. The US and its allies publicly accused the Syrian government of responsibility, and President Obama threatened to bomb Syria in purported retaliation. But Obama ultimately pulled back after reaching an agreement with Russia to destroy Syria's chemical weapons arsenal.

Since then, a growing body of public information has raised questions about US-led claims of Syrian government guilt. The new open-source study, published by Rootclaim, adds to this evidence.


Comment: See also:


Fire

Capitol riot probe: Will Dems use 'Benghazi playbook' against Trump and GOP ahead of midterms?

Pelosi
© Reuters/Elizabeth Frantz
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi • July 20, 2021
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's attempts to present the 1/6 Select Committee as a non-partisan endeavour are doomed, say US political commentators, adding that the Dems' effort bears a strong resemblance to the GOP's Benghazi probe against Hillary Clinton.

On 25 July, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi named a Republican Trump critic, Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL), to a special panel investigating the Capitol riot, in what she described as a push to make the initiative "non-partisan".

Before tapping Kinzinger, Pelosi blocked Reps. Jim Jordan of Ohio and Jim Banks of Indiana, known for their sympathy with the former president, claiming that their actions could disrupt the committee's work.

Minority Leader McCarthy slammed the move, saying "Republicans will not be party to [Pelosi's] sham process and will instead pursue our own investigation of the facts," unless she seats all his picks. The House speaker has so far brought on the committee's board Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo, who was stripped of her role as the third-ranking Republican in the House over her criticism of Trump.

Comment: See also:
So this could be the reason why Pelosi kicked Jim Banks off the committee investigating the Capitol riot


Sheriff

'We won't be coming': Washington state police reform goes into effect, law enforcement warns of consequences

Seattle Police
© Adam Cohn/Flickr
Seattle Police on Motorcycles
Washington state legislators passed a series of new police reform bills that went into effect on Sunday, the most noteworthy being HB 1310 where law enforcement officers can only make arrests on the grounds of "probable cause" instead of "reasonable suspicion," giving a green light for criminals to commit crimes without being held accountable.

Signed into law by Democratic Governor Jay Inslee without a vote from the people through ballot measures, HB 1310 also called the "use of force bill" drastically limits the way police officers respond to calls.

"It's going to change the level of service we give to our citizens. Not because we want to, but because we have to," Moses Lake Police Chief Fuhr said, according to Columbia Basin Herald:
"This is changing completely the way we've responded to some of these calls ... and there will be some calls that we just absolutely don't respond to from here on out. It's going to change the level of service we give to our citizens. Not because we want to, but because we have to."
While the rest of the country has witnessed the destruction of Seattle at the hands of failed progressive policies and anti-police bills, these new laws apply to all law enforcement agencies statewide.

Comment: Constricting the authority and protocol of the police leaves a gigantic vulnerability gap for the public.