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Tue, 26 Oct 2021
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Welcome to shocked and awed 21st century geopolitics

Lavrov/Yi
© AFP/Russian Ministry/Anadolu Agency
Russia's FM Sergey Lavrov • China's FM Wang Yi
Beijing, China • March 23, 2021
It took 18 years after Shock and Awe unleashed on Iraq for the Hegemon to be mercilessly shocked and awed by a virtually simultaneous, diplomatic Russia-China one-two. How this is a real game-changing moment cannot be emphasized enough; 21st century geopolitics will never be the same again.

Yet it was the Hegemon who first crossed the diplomatic Rubicon. The handlers behind hologram Joe "I'll do whatever you want me to do, Nance" Biden had whispered in his earpiece to brand Russian President Vladimir Putin as a soulless "killer" in the middle of a softball interview.

Not even at the height of the Cold War the superpowers resorted to ad hominem attacks. The result of such an astonishing blunder was to regiment virtually the whole Russian population behind Putin - because that was perceived as an attack against the Russian state. Then came Putin's cool, calm, collected - and quite diplomatic - response, which needs to be carefully pondered.

These sharp-as-a-dagger words are arguably the most devastatingly powerful five minutes in the history of post-truth international relations.

Comment: There is no 'saving face' for Biden (nor the West for that matter). That thin cover has been blown far and wide. For America it's 'Game Over'. It just doesn't think so.


Passport

Senior Tories join Jeremy Corbyn to oppose Covid passports ahead of trials

Iain Duncan Smith
© UK Parliament/Jessica Taylor/PA
Iain Duncan Smith is one of four former Tory cabinet ministers to have signed a letter against the use of Covid-status certification.
More than 70 MPs including 40 Conservatives, the former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and Liberal Democrat members have forged a parliamentary alliance to oppose Covid identity documents.

It came as Boris Johnson suggested the government would move ahead with the scheme and it was announced that pilots of mass testing at large events would take place this month.

Four former Tory cabinet ministers including Iain Duncan Smith and Andrew Mitchell are among the group, along with key Labour leftwingers such as John McDonnell, Clive Lewis, Diane Abbott and Rebecca Long-Bailey. The coalition of MPs is backed by the civil liberties groups Liberty, Big Brother Watch, the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI) and Privacy International.

Johnson has noticeably warmed to the idea of the documents in recent weeks. Government sources have suggested the certificates could be used by businesses as a way to relax social distancing measures inside venues.

An interim report on the measure is due to be published on Monday but a pilot event is already planned for 18 April with residents near Wembley invited to apply for 4,000 tickets to the FA Cup semi-final between Leicester and Southampton.


Comment: 'Carrot and Stick'


Comment: The overall ploy, however, is: 'Stick' and then 'Carrot'! Refusing any portion of the population of the rights to peacefully assemble - be it even a football game - is a blight against human freedom. Worse yet, offering rewards to the 'obedient' is coercion. Those who promote this scheme have a different kind of game in mind. Bravo to those who recognize the trap.


Laptop

Hunter Biden finally admits laptop at center of Post exposé could 'absolutely' belong to him

Hunter BIden
© screenshot
Hunter Biden talks to 'CBS This Morning'
Hunter Biden has finally 'fessed up that the laptop at the center of The Post's explosive exposé last year "absolutely" could belong to him, he revealed in an interview Friday.

In a sitdown with CBS's Sunday Morning, President Biden's embattled son was pointedly asked "yes or no" if the MacBook Pro that was dropped off at a Delaware computer repair shop in April 2019 was in fact his.

"I really don't know what the answer is, that's the truthful answer," Hunter Biden said in an excerpt of the interview released on Friday, before adding, "I have no idea."

But asked whether it could have belonged to him, he replied,
"Absolutely. Certainly, there could be a laptop out there that was stolen from me. It could be that I was hacked, it could be that it was Russian intelligence. It could be that it was stolen from me."

Bullseye

Russia fines Twitter three times in one day for leaving up 'illegal' content

twitter in russia
© Kirill Kukhmar/TASS/dpa/picture alliance
Russia is clamping down on microblogging social media site Twitter, following nationwide protests
Posts calling for rallies in support of jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny had "incited teenagers" to take part in "illegal activities," Russia's media watchdog said earlier this year.

A Russian court fined Twitter a total of 8.9 million roubles ($116,800, €99,300) on Friday over accusations that the service had failed to delete illegal content.

The fine is the latest move taken by Moscow against the microblogging site. It recently slowed its speed as well as threatened to ban it outright, accusing it of hosting content that it said ranged from child pornography to drug abuse.

Twitter did not immediately respond to the verdict.

Comment: The take from RT:
California-based social networking site Twitter will be forced to shell out more than a hundred thousand dollars in fines, after a Russian court ruled that it had breached its obligations to delete material banned in the country.

A judge handed the company three separate penalties, totaling 8.9 million rubles ($116,800) on Friday. The Moscow Court found that the service was guilty of breaching the terms of Russia's administrative code by failing to delete material flagged by authorities.

In March, media regulator Roskomnadzor announced that it would begin slowing Twitter's speeds in the country over allegations it had not complied with a number of deletion requests. Officials say that they had filed more than 28,000 requests for posts to be taken down but, at the time of the decision, "3,168 pieces of content containing prohibited information... remained not deleted." These reportedly include more than 2,500 calls for children to kill themselves and 450 involving child pornography.

Vadim Subbotin, Roskomnadzor's deputy head, told journalists that, if "Twitter does not adequately respond to our requests - if things go on as they have been - then in a month it will be blocked without needing a court order." However, he urged the American firm to comply with the orders and avoid a total ban. The regulator has also flagged concerns over the use of social media to promote unauthorized protests, such as those that followed the jailing of opposition figure Alexey Navalny.

In a statement at the time, the company said it was "aware of reports that Twitter is being intentionally slowed down broadly and indiscriminately in Russia due to apparent content removal concerns." The tech firm added that it was "deeply concerned by increased attempts to block and throttle online public conversation."

Earlier this week, President Vladimir Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said that he was optimistic foreign-owned social media giants could learn to live within the country's laws. "It is necessary to find a middle ground between the priorities of media freedom and regulation," he said. "More and more life flows into it. The more life there is, the more rules there need to be. And these should be the rules of the game for everybody, including foreign companies, because the internet has no borders."



Dollar

Ocasio-Cortez eyeing $10 trillion over 10 years for infrastructure

AOC mask cortez
© Greg Nash
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) late Wednesday called President Biden's $2.25 trillion infrastructure package "encouraging," but said the U.S. could need as much as $10 trillion over 10 years to invest in infrastructure and boost jobs and other priorities across the country.

"The vision that President Biden and the administration has laid out ... has surprised a lot of us in a positive way and in the detail and the thought that's here, the scope of it, is really encouraging," Ocasio-Cortez told MSNBC's Rachel Maddow.

However, the progressive lawmaker added that she has "serious concerns that it's not enough," calling for officials to "go way higher."

Comment: See also:


TV

Repressive tolerance: NBC's Lester Holt incites Twitter mob with provocative monologue about 'journalistic responsibility' - 'fairness is overrated'

Lester Holt
© REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
NBC Nightly News anchor Lester Holt hosts an NBC News town hall event with US Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden in Miami, Florida, US, October 5, 2020.
NBC anchor Lester Holt has stirred up some serious social media drama after arguing that the media has no obligation to give two sides to each story.

In the speech he gave while accepting the Edward R. Murrow Award for Lifetime Achievement in Journalism, Holt criticized the notion that journalists must provide equal time to opposing viewpoints on an issue, insisting that some viewpoints are unworthy of airtime.

"I think it's become clearer that fairness is overrated," the host of NBC's Nightly News remarked. "Before you run off and tweet that headline, let me explain a bit. The idea that we should always give two sides equal weight and merit does not reflect the world we find ourselves in. That the sun sets in the west is a fact. Any contrary view does not deserve our time or attention."


Comment: He's actually right, it's just that his views (and his colleagues') are the ones that don't deserve time and attention.



He further argued that providing a platform for "misinformation," especially when discussing issues related to public health and safety, can be dangerous, adding: "Our duty is to be fair to the truth." Apparently anticipating criticisms of his stance, he stressed that refusing to cover "unsupported arguments" is not proof of some sort of agenda, and, in fact, "just the opposite."


Comment: Projection. We're living in a world of Marcuse's creation.


Bad Guys

Russian diplomats reveal 'acute shortage' of essentials in North Korea caused by Covid-19 restrictions, embassies almost empty

Russian Embassy in North Korea
© Sputnik
The Russian Embassy in North Korea.
Diplomats serving in North Korea are enduring a shortage of goods and a lack of medicine, as restrictions to battle the Covid-19 pandemic have caused the already-secretive country to isolate itself even more than before.

Writing on Facebook, the Russian Embassy in Pyongyang revealed that 38 foreign nationals have recently left their diplomatic missions in the country, with representatives from the likes of the UK, Brazil, and Germany also flying home.

"The exodus of foreigners will continue," an embassy statement read. "There are now hardly any foreigners left - fewer than 290 in all. One can understand those leaving the Korean capital - not everyone can withstand the unprecedentedly strict total restrictions, the acute shortage of essential goods, including medicines, and the lack of opportunities to solve health problems."

Only nine ambassadors and four chargé d'affaires now remain inside the country, and most embassies are operating with a skeleton staff. However, despite the troubles facing those from Russia, the whole team is staying put.

"The white, blue and red tricolor still proudly flies over the building of the Russian diplomatic mission in the center of Pyongyang," the statement continued. "Of course, it is not easy for us as well ... but the capacity of the team is maintained in full."

Pirates

'Dangerously misguided': Biden faces pushback on plan to tax corporations from business groups and Republicans

biden corporate tax hike
© Reuters
President Joe Biden vowed on Wednesday to make companies like Amazon pay their fair share in taxes to fund his ambitious US$2 trillion infrastructure plan.
President Joe Biden's plan to raise the corporate tax rate by 7 percentage points has generated growing opposition in the business world and among some lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

Biden hopes to raise the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28% in order to help fund his more than $2 trillion infrastructure spending package. The American Jobs Plan also increases the global minimum tax applied to U.S. corporations by increasing it from 13% to 21% and aims to generate more revenue by cracking down on tax avoidance by companies with foreign investments.

Matthew Dickerson, the director of the Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget at the Heritage Foundation, told the Washington Examiner on Tuesday that the proposed tax changes would slow economic growth and "threaten America's global competitiveness."

Comment: Rather than increasing tax rates, why not close off loopholes that let corporations and high income individuals hide their wealth? Oh, yeah. Maybe Biden is counting on the public's short memory?




Biohazard

French pharma firm found guilty over diabetes drug that killed 2,000 people, left thousands more with debilitating cardiovascular problems

Mediator
© Fred Tanneau/AFP/Getty Images
The diabetes drug Mediator. As many as 5 million people took the drug between 1976 and November 2009 when it was withdrawn in France.
A French court has fined one of the country's biggest pharmaceutical firms €2.7m (£2.3m) after finding it guilty of deception and manslaughter over a pill linked to the deaths of up to 2,000 people.

In one of the biggest medical scandals in France, the privately owned laboratory Servier was accused of covering up the potentially fatal side-effects of the widely prescribed drug Mediator.

The former executive Jean-Philippe Seta was sentenced to a suspended jail sentence of four years. The French medicines agency, accused of failing to act quickly enough on warnings about the drug, was fined €303,000.


Comment: A suspended sentence and a fine for his part in the deaths of at least 2,000 people??


Comment: As tens of millions of people submit themselves to coronavirus vaccine trials, in what is possibly the largest medical experiment the world has ever seen, this is yet another stark reminder of just what can happen:


Eye 2

New Zealand tycoon pleads guilty to possessing child sexual abuse images

Brierley
© Jenny Evans/Getty Images
Ron Brierley was arrested at Sydney international airport in December 2019 over possession of child sexual abuse images.
One of New Zealand's most well-known businessmen has pleaded guilty to possessing child sexual abuse images, including some showing children as young as two.

Ron Brierley's pleas on three charges in an Australian court have sparked a rarely invoked procedure to strip him of the knighthood he received more than 30 years ago.

New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern said she was initiating a forfeiture process for the honour, which requires approval from the Queen.

Comment: This makes a strange change, because usually the established powers don't bother to investigate the crimes of the pedophiles in their midst until they're dead. Although there's still a chance that claims of 'ill health' from this aged predator may lead to him serving no time in prison at all: