Puppet Masters
While the current $1.9 trillion proposal includes $1,400 stimulus checks — higher than the $600 and $1,200 approved in previous stimulus bills last year — it also includes tighter caps on who would receive a partial check.
Individuals making up to $75,000 would be eligible for the full stimulus check, while those making between $80,000 and $100,000 — or couples making double that - will get no money, despite getting partial checks in previous bills.

Honduran migrants, right, clash with Guatemalan soldiers and police who keep them from advancing toward the US border, on the side of the highway in Vado Hondo, Guatemala, Monday, Jan. 18, 2021
Cueller hasn't exactly hit the panic button, but the reality is that numbers don't lie. About 10,000 people trying to enter the United States last week were apprehended — 2,500 in the last two days alone. Border Patrol data shows that In October 2020, there were 71,922 apprehensions, while in November, data showed 72,091 apprehensions. In January, data showed a significant rise with 78,323 apprehensions.
"We are weeks, maybe even days, away from a crisis on the southern border. Inaction is simply not an option," said Congressman Cuellar. "Our country is currently unprepared to handle a surge in migrants in the middle of the pandemic."
Comment:
- Report: Arizona Sheriff blames Biden for fivefold spike in illegal border crossings
- Republicans slam Biden's return to 'Catch and Release' for 25K asylum seekers
- Biden brings back 'kinder' kids in cages - 'The containers offer privacy!'
- Biden's DHS to release 25.6K migrants into Texas, California communities
- Biden's border crisis: Exactly as he asked for
- Judge bans enforcement of Biden's 100-day deportation pause
Meanwhile, another major part of the Covid biomedical complex has received far less attention: the use of antibodies for detecting, diagnosing and treating infection with the novel coronavirus.
Hundreds of antibodies have been approved for these purposes since January 2020. And hundreds more are poised to start being marketed soon.
This is part of the biomedical gold rush: by last summer already, antibodies were on track to become the most lucrative medical product, with global revenue projected to reach nearly half a trillion dollars by 2024. Profit margins in the range of 67% aren't uncommon.

German court suspends surveillance of far-right AfD, for now
Germany's domestic intelligence agency must not declare the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party a case for surveillance until proceedings brought by the party to challenge such a move have concluded, a court order stated on Friday.
German media had reported a day earlier that the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), had placed the entire AfD under surveillance.
The BfV was apparently unable to announce the decision officially due to the ongoing legal dispute.
Comment: See also:
- Germany places entire far-right AfD party under surveillance
- 'Teachers should be scared': AfD party website allows students to inform on staff
- Enough is enough: German AfD party sues Merkel amid open-door policy toward migrants
- 'Not kosher'? Germany's right-wing AfD raises concerns now that it has a Jewish group of members
- "The separation of Church and State is no longer observed": Church plays same 'inglorious' role as in Nazi Germany - AfD leader
- AfD boldly vows to become Germany's third largest force as Merkel admits refugee crisis was 'out of control'
- Another regional election defeat for Merkel, right-wing AfD comes in 2nd
- 'Margaret Thatcher is my role model': German far-right AfD leader Alice Weidel
- Divide and conquer: German anti-immigrant AfD gains record high support

A medic (2nd L) wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) talks to a woman waiting to take a Covid-19 coronavirus test at the National Olympic Stadium in Phnom Penh on February 23, 2021.
Passed unanimously by the country's parliament on Friday, the law calls for a three-year prison sentence for those who break quarantine orders, and up to twenty years in jail for any group that intentionally spreads the virus.
Cambodia's Health Minister Mam Bunheng hailed the law as a way to "protect public health."
The southeast Asian nation has registered 932 Covid cases since the start of the pandemic, but has yet to record a single death linked to the virus.
Comment: If the coronavirus was the threat that governments claimed it to be, it's likely they wouldn't need to deploy increasing numbers of their security forces to remind citizens of the supposed threat.
See also:
- Czechs send 30,000 police, soldiers to enforce lockdown travel restrictions
- Welcome to Snitch Nation: From kids to parents, it's a race to rat out your (former) loved ones before they get you first
No reasons were apparently given for the decision to ditch the interim report but the move comes after a string of delays and a dramatic U-turn by the WHO.
Comment: It would appear that the report discredited the propaganda coming out of the West and so it's a smeared as a 'whitewash'.
And after it was accused of "a whitewash" by saying it found Covid probably did not originate at the Wuhan wet market or from a state science lab leak.
The much-heralded probe had been plagued by delays, concern over access and bickering between Beijing and Washington.
Comment: For more on the massive US biowarfare research programs: Ethnic-Specific Weapons: Leaked Documents Reveal US Diplomats in Georgia Trafficking Human Blood And Pathogens For Pentagon Biowarfare Laboratory
See also: Salisbury Nerve Agent Attack Uncovers $70 Million Pentagon Bioweapons Program at Porton Down
And check out SOTT radio's:
- Objective:Health - The Ultimate Insanity of the Covid Lockdown - Interview with Sott.net Editor Joe Quinn
- Objective:Health - Deconstructing the Covid Narrative with Investigative Journalist Rosemary Frei
- Objective:Health - Gov. Response Killed More Than Covid - Interview with Denis Rancourt

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a meeting with participants of the We Are Together nationwide volunteer campaign at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia March 4, 2021.
In a meeting with civic volunteers on Thursday, Vladimir Putin claimed that some accounts were even encouraging minors to commit suicide, arguing that they would feel the full force of the law. "When the police get to these freaks," he said, "they might be Rambo on the internet, pushing a boy or a girl to jump from a roof, but they will fill their pants. When the bastard is sitting there in front of you, he's a bug and we don't mind just crushing him."
The president's comments come on the back of another colorful comparison aimed at those taking advantage of children online. During a meeting at the Ministry of Internal Affairs on Wednesday, Putin told officials that more action was needed to crack down on people using the internet to "try to take advantage of children in cold blood [in order to] achieve their own selfish, 'ferret' goals."
Comment: And, understandably, Putin has the full support of many parents in Russia: "Just like in Ukraine and Belarus": TikTok condemned by Russian parents association over calls for youth to attend Navalny protests
See also: Pro-western liberal, anti-migrant nationalist, or political opportunist: Who exactly is Russian opposition figure Alexey Navalny?
Harris spoke to Netanyahu on Thursday, with a White House readout of the call saying she "underscored the Biden-Harris Administration's commitment to the US-Israel partnership," and affirmed her opposition to the International Criminal Court prosecuting Israeli soldiers for alleged war crimes.
Nothing about the call was surprising, as unwavering support for Israel is a given no matter which party is in charge in Washington. However, Biden's absence was notable.
Comment: The cover-up and snow job are not sustainable. The emperor has no clothes.
The bill, also named "For The People Act" of 2021, passed in the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives in a 220-210 vote on Wednesday. Only one Democrat was opposed.
The 800-page bill basically codifies all the problematic practices of the 2020 election into law. There's an expansion of mail-in ballots and extended deadlines to count them, but also automatic voter registration, a waiver for voter IDs, and nationwide ballot-harvesting, California-style. It also shifts the authority to draw congressional districts from states, criminalizes broadly defined "interference" in elections, and so much more.
Whatever one may think of the Heritage Foundation, its analysis of the bill is factually accurate. Don't take my word for it, though, read it and compare it to the actual text.
However, it so far has not found that any lawmakers were involved with the riot or personally helped any of the rioters, the official said.
Authorities have been investigating the pro-Trump rioters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6 for months and have been able to arrest hundreds of those involved in the riot that led to the deaths of five people.
Officials are still arresting those who stormed the Capitol but are going to start focusing on those who planned the attack, who funded them and what connection, if any, lawmakers had.
The FBI and Justice Department declined to comment to CNN.
Comment: As accusations fly, the war of deflection continues:
Former President Trump, his eldest son and several of his allies were sued on Friday by Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.) over their role in the run-up to the Jan. 6 breach of the U.S. Capitol.
The 65-page complaint filed in federal court in Washington, D.C., accuses Trump, his son Donald Trump Jr., Rep. Mo Brooks (R-Ala.) and Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani of inciting the riot and violating a number of federal and D.C. laws.
Each defendant was among the speakers at a pro-Trump rally that immediately preceded the deadly Capitol breach. The lawsuit depicts the incendiary rally speeches as a tipping point that culminated a months-long disinformation campaign to push the false claim that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from Trump.
Unbiased accounts do not support the claim that pre-Capitol rhetoric was incendiary.
"The horrific events of January 6 were a direct and foreseeable consequence of the Defendants' unlawful actions," the complaint states. "As such, the Defendants are responsible for the injury and destruction that followed."
The lawsuit seeks unspecified money damages and asks for a court order requiring Trump and his allies to provide at least a week's notice before holding any future rally in D.C. related to an election.
Among the allegations contained in the nine-count complaint is that defendants conspired to prevent lawmakers and then-Vice President Mike Pence from certifying President Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris's election win, in violation of a federal civil rights law.
Brooks called Swalwell's lawsuit "frivolous." "Under no circumstances will Swalwell, or any other Socialist, stop me from fighting for America," Brooks said in a statement.
Swalwell's lawsuit comes less than a month after Trump was acquitted in a Senate impeachment trial over his role in the Jan. 6 attack. Swalwell, a former county prosecutor in California, served as one of the House impeachment managers in the Senate trial.











Comment: