Puppet Masters
To be sure, some tech firms, including Google, have taken a hit from the weakened advertising market. But tech stock prices generally have soared as most others have lagged. Undeterred by the downturn, tech moguls continue to increase their research spending in order to tighten their already rapidly constricting stranglehold on the economy. The shift to remote work has boosted firms that facilitate video conferencing and digital collaboration like Slack — the fastest growing business application on record — as well Google Hangouts, Zoom and Microsoft Teams.
No surprise then that the tech rich are simply getting richer: seven of the ten richest Americans come from the tech sector. Apple, by some calculations, is now worth more than the entire oil and gas industry. The already obscenely rich have become richer still; Jeff Bezos alone has seen his net worth jump by an estimated 34.6 billion in the first two months of the pandemic.
Brazilian lawmaker Eduardo Bolsonaro has introduced a bill to outlaw the creation of, sale, distribution or display of items containing the hammer and sickle or five-pointed star "for the purposes of propaganda of communism," equating the symbol with the Nazi Swastika, and proposing from 9 and 15 years in prison for violators.
Comment: By all means, associate communist symbols with their true history. But total bans like this - including the swastika - kind of go against the value of liberty, do they not?
In a series of tweets about the bill, the lawmaker explained that he was inspired by a 2015 Ukrainian law by the country's post-Maidan coup government which "prohibits communism and Nazism with a focus on freedom."
Bolsonaro stressed that his bill "aims to prevent genocides, which are the result of Nazism and Communism, just as the penal code criminalizes the murder of an individual."
The bill also proposes renaming any streets, squares, public buildings or institutions named after any communism or Nazism-related persons, events or ideas.
"In justifying the project, I use factual examples of these misfortunes: the Holodomor in Ukraine (1st image) perpetrated by the Soviet communists, and the Holocaust carried out by the German Nazis (2nd image)," Bolsonaro added. However, his Twitter followers immediately pointed out to him that the image he posted of the Holodomor actually appears to be from the Bengal famine of 1943 in India, which was a British colony at the time.
"It was meant to be a warning, an intelligence bulletin from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) alerting local, state and federal law enforcement to a Russian scheme to damage Joe Biden's presidential campaign," Karl explained.
Comment: He's doing that all by himself - no help from the Russians needed in order to make the obvious even more obvious.
The draft bulletin, according ABC News, was titled "Russia likely to denigrate health of U.S. candidates to influence 2020 election" and was supposed to be released to law enforcement agencies raising the alarm that Russia is trying to convince American voters that Biden isn't mentally equipped for the Oval Office but was never distributed.
Comment: Convincing the public that saying Biden is mentally unfit is not the same as saying Biden is mentally fit. He isn't.
"We assess Russian malign influence actors are likely to continued denigrating presidential candidates through allegations of poor mental or physical health to influence the outcome of the 2020 elections," the bulletin read.
Comment: In case you haven't put the pieces together yet, here it is: if it's true - and especially if it's an uncomfortable truth - then it's "Russian propaganda."
Driven by WHO, the Geneva UN Medical Directors (UNMD) group has just issued a CONSENSUS STATEMENT for UN staff in Geneva that is essentially warning UN staff of stricter measures to be taken, such as mask wearing in the office when 2-meter distances could not be respected, as well as increased working from home again, when as recently as in June these conditions were relaxed. Working from home means separating colleagues from each other, connecting them by Zoom, but NO HUMAN CONTACT. That's the name of the game.
The UNMD refers to the Canton of Geneva's new regulations, based on Switzerland's claim of a steady increase in Covid-19 "infections". Since the beginning of July new "cases" have surpassed 100 a day and reached even way beyond 200 at the end of July and above 250 in mid-August. The testing positive has allegedly steadily increased and often by close to 10% per day. Now, surprisingly - they say - 40% of the "cases" concern people between 20 and 40 years of age. But who checks? - Is it a mandate by WHO to diversify the statistics, so as to better justify universal vaccination and another total lockdown?

President Donald Trump, with U.S. Attorney General William Barr (L), speaks to the press as he tours an area affected by riots in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on September 1, 2020.
The unrest appears to have been ended in that city after the National Guard supplemented Kenosha law enforcement personnel. The riots exploded with the excuse being the shooting by a police officer of a black man who was resisting police officers. The man, Jacob Blake, was like every single other black man that has been shot of late: sporting a substantial criminal record.
- Mr. Blake was charged on July 6th of this year with third-degree felony sexual assault
- Misdemeanors for trespassing and disorderly conduct
- Both of these offenses were carrying a "penalty enhancer" because they were connected with domestic abuse.
Comment: Biden poked his head out of his basement long enough to make a belated statement condemning the violence. He did not, however express any sympathy for those suffering the loss of property and jobs, but only took aim at Trump:
Democrat presidential nominee Joe Biden's campaign did not miss the opportunity to scorn Trump for his refusal "to even repudiate one of his supporters who is charged with murder," issuing a carefully worded statement late Monday.Kenosha's Democrat city officials weren't happy with Trump's visit, although twitterati hoped the visit would force mainstream media to show the extent of the damage caused by the rioting.
The president himself took Biden to task for not condemning Antifa, the far-left militants behind the months-long unrest in Portland, who actually murdered a Trump supporter over the weekend there. While Republicans tend to see no difference between Black Lives Matter and Antifa, Democrats deny Antifa exists at all.
The mayor of Kenosha and Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, said they believe Trump's visit comes at a bad time. Evers sent Trump a letter urging him not to come, saying the visit "will only delay our work to overcome division and move forward together."Trump's focus was on what it would take to get Kenosha citizens back on their feet:
Trump also refused to condemn the violence and unrest caused by the scuffles between his supporters and counterprotesters when questioned by a reporter, arguing that "paint is not bullets" and that it is "a defensive mechanism."
The president's comments come just hours after Biden accused Trump of "poisoning" the nation's values, while he condemned the violence at recent protests Monday and blamed Trump as the battle over who's to blame.
The president spoke with about six people next to a burned-out building that used to be B&L Office Furniture Inc. in Kenosha and told them he would help them rebuild their businesses.Meanwhile there were calls to defund NPR which proclaimed Rittenhouse guilty of murder, despite the clear video evidence of self-defence:
Scott Carpenter, the co-owner of the office furniture store, thanked Trump for visiting.
"I just appreciate President Trump coming today; everybody here does," he said. "We're so thankful that we got the federal troops in to help because once they got here, things did calm down quite a bit."
John Rode, the owner of Rode's Camera Shop, carried an image of his business that had been reduced to rubble a week ago during the riots.
"We're going to work with you. We're going to help you. Okay?" Trump said. "We'll help you rebuild. It's a great area. It's a great state. This should never happen."
A crowd of Trump's supporters gathered in the city to greet the president in Kenosha as well as a group of protesters and Black Lives Matter supporters.
After the visit, Trump gathered with business owners and members of law enforcement to discuss the importance of safety in the streets of America's cities.
The president announced that his administration would commit $1 million to support Kenosha police, nearly $4 million to help rebuild small businesses, and $43 million for public safety resources in the state.
Trump also welcomed Pastor James and Sharon Ward of the INSIGHT Church to the roundtable discussion. Ward is the pastor for Jacob Blake's mother, Julia Jackson. (Jacob Blake's father, Jacob Blake Sr., has said publicly that he does not have a pastor.)
NPR scornfully dismissed video from the riots that appeared to show Rittenhouse had fired on protesters who were pursuing him, claiming it "only tell[s] a partial story" and had "split onlookers on party lines." The outlet also mischaracterized Rittenhouse's defenders, arguing he'd been painted as a "tragic figure" due to "Democrat failures to quell violence on their streets" instead of referring to the self-defense explanation proffered by Trump and Rittenhouse's lawyers.
The calls to #DefundNPR came hard and fast from the president's supporters, who denounced it as "a radical leftist organization funded with your tax dollars."
The network's defenders, however, pointed out that NPR wasn't as government-funded as its detractors seemed to think, with just a small fraction of its cash coming from governments and the taxpayer-funded Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB).
NPR scornfully dismissed video from the riots that appeared to show Rittenhouse had fired on protesters who were pursuing him, claiming it "only tell[s] a partial story" and had "split onlookers on party lines." The outlet also mischaracterized Rittenhouse's defenders, arguing he'd been painted as a "tragic figure" due to "Democrat failures to quell violence on their streets" instead of referring to the self-defense explanation proffered by Trump and Rittenhouse's lawyers.
The calls to #DefundNPR came hard and fast from the president's supporters, who denounced it as "a radical leftist organization funded with your tax dollars."
The CPB lost much of its taxpayer funding in the 1980s, and large corporations stepped in to pick up the slack, eager to ensure their coverage on trusted "public radio" would be favorable. Over the past three decades, private interests, such as currency-speculating liberal billionaire George Soros, have flooded the once-"public" NPR and its ilk with cash, even as the outlets continue to tell their audience they're supported by "viewers like you."
Vladimir Uglev, who claims to have developed the nerve agent Novichok, floated the alternative theory in an interview with Echo of Moscow radio and reported by the Daily Mail on Wednesday.
"They put this substance on his underwear, his underpants, socks, or his undershirt, and that was it," Uglev said.
Supporters of Navalny, 44, believe he sipped spiked tea at an airport before falling ill on a flight from Siberia to Moscow, blaming the Kremlin for the attack.
Comment: Bryan MacDonald for RT writes:
Hospital tests on Russian anti-corruption campaigner and Moscow protest leader Alexey Navalny show that he was "beyond doubt" poisoned with a 'Novichok' class chemical agent, according to the German government.Apparently Germany was bold enough to request comment from Russia about the incident but it still has yet to share this "indisputable proof" with them:
Berlin added that it will provide the new information to European Union partners and other international organizations. However, the Russian government says it has not been informed. The 'Novichok'-like substance is from the same class as that allegedly used to poison Russian-born British intelligence agent Sergei Skripal, and his daughter, in Salisbury in 2018.
Though the spokesman for the German government did not blame the Russian state for Navalny's poisoning, he called on Moscow to explain its position on the case. "The German government condemns this attack in the most resolute way," Steffen Seibert added.
"At the initiative of the Charité hospital [in Berlin] the Bundeswehr's [German military] special laboratory has carried out toxicological analysis of Alexei Navalny's test samples," Seibert explained. "The analysis provided indisputable proof of the presence of a Novichok class nerve agent." He added that Chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday held a conference with ministers and agreed a number of steps in the light of the latest data.
"The federal government will provide information on testing results to the EU and NATO through the Foreign Ministry's channels," he continued. Seibert added that "an appropriate joint reaction will be discussed."
Fingers will no doubt now be pointed at Moscow. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said last week that "the Russian leadership clearly does not" benefit from Navalny's illness, and slammed western governments for their "suspicious haste" in blaming Russia. Of these governments, Germany and the US have led the charge, with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo calling for a criminal investigation into the alleged attack, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel making a similar demand, "in light of the prominent role played by Mr. Navalny in the political opposition in Russia."
The US has already threatened to punish Russia with sanctions, and Siebert said on Wednesday that Germany would discuss "an appropriate joint response" with European Union leaders and Washington.
[...]
The doctors added that there was no threat to his life but there was the possibility of long-term effects on his nervous system.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry "No, we didn't receive this information,"As with the Skripal case, and many others, it's highly unlikely Russia has need nor would do something like this, whereas other more nefarious players have much more to gain, and have a history committing such crimes; only if the public falls for it, of course:
The Foreign Ministry also said it was still waiting for Germany to reply to an official inquest from the office of Russia's Prosecutor General regarding Navalny's condition.
- Skripal Likely Poisoned by British Intelligence in Effort to Smear and Silence Russian World View
- Litvinenko - By Way Of Deception Part 1
Journalists are under attack globally for doing their jobs. Julian Assange is facing a 175-year sentence for publishing if extradited to the United States. The Trump administration has gone from denigrating journalists as 'enemies of the people' to now criminalizing common practices in journalism that have long served the public interest. WikiLeaks founder and Editor Julian Assange's extradition is being sought by the Trump administration for publishing US government documents which exposed war crimes and human rights abuses. He is being held in maximum security HMP Belmarsh in London and faces a 175-years sentence if extradited.
There is a war on journalism - Julian Assange is at the centre of that war. If this precedent is set then what happens to Assange can happen to any journalist.
A recent New York Times piece about the presidential election reads more like an article in The Onion or Babylon Bee. It claims that "President Trump's litigiousness and unfounded claims of fraud have increased the likelihood of epic postelection court fights."
The president's "litigiousness"?! In state-after-state, almost all the lawsuits filed over this year's elections have been filed by Democrats and liberal or progressive organizations, seeking to change election rules by judicial fiat. Their objective: force all-mail elections or huge increases in absentee balloting while simultaneously eliminating safeguards against abuse and fraud.
The Times top brass must not have read their own reporters' story very carefully. That story cites law professor Richard Pildes's count of at least 160 lawsuits filed by "party organizations, campaigns and interest groups," noting that the Trump campaign and the Republican National Committee "are involved" in only 40, "some in response to Democratic lawsuits." For those familiar with basic arithmetic, the "litigiousness" is on the other side of the political aisle. Perhaps the Times didn't bother to do the math.

Facebook has closed down accounts opened by many journalists and activists in Gaza.
Comment: 'Greater Israel' is growing and 'the planners' have the edge.
A brief summary:
- Governments all over the world sign "sleeping contracts" with pharmaceutical firms to buy flu vaccines in the event of a pandemic.
- In 2009 the World Health Organization changed its official definition of "pandemic" to a much looser one (with no requirement for anyone to have died).
- Just weeks later they declared the H1N1 flu a "pandemic", despite minuscule numbers of deaths
- This triggered sleeping contracts worth billions.
- Governments were legally obliged to buy up and distribute untested flu vaccines.
- The vaccines caused serious, life-long side effects in over 1300 children.
- Legal immunity meant no pharmaceutical firm paid any compensation, instead reparations were paid by taxpayers
- Many of the scientists who advised the WHO declare a pandemic were later revealed to have financial interests in vaccine manufacturers.
This shocking recent history has been totally memory-holed in the mainstream, but serves as a dress rehearsal for our current "crisis". Watch the video, share it widely. It has, quite obviously, never been more important or more relevant.













Comment: See also: