Puppet Masters
On the last day of July, 2020 a dear friend of mine from Montana, a stolid, Native American fellow several years my junior, visited me at my home in Utah to check on my health. Weeks earlier I had had surgery on my spinal chord, as one of my legs had gone paralyzed over the months of the pandemic. He told me that there was a group of people, some ex-federal some not, some cyber-experts and some of various other expertise, who were organizing on the subject of election fraud. My friend was adamant that I get involved and help them. My friend was quite a squared-away individual, and I always took his advice and requests seriously.
The next day, August 1, my friend died in a plane crash. As the coincidence was troubling, I looked into it personally (I am a multi-engine instrument land and seaplane pilot). It does seem to me to have been the error of his instructor, who flew the plane into a Montana box canyon without the power to climb out.
The exact practical applications of the digital documentation are still under consideration, but its primary purpose is to facilitate a reopening of society.
"We are taking the first steps so that, before the end of February, you will be able to see your vaccination on (online health services platform) Sundhed.dk," acting finance minister Morten Bødskov said.
"In three to four months, the digital corona passport will be ready for use for things like business trips," Bødskov added.

President Joe Biden, Jill Biden, and their family walk the abbreviated parade route after Biden's inauguration
In his first interview since entering the White House, Biden, sitting next to his wife, Jill, was asked about the allegations surrounding his son Hunter Biden's business dealings in Ukraine and China and what kind of guardrails he would put up for family.
"We're going to run this like the Obama-Biden administration. No one in our family and extended family is going to be involved in any government undertaking or foreign policy. And nobody has an office in this place," he told People magazine in an interview published Wednesday.
Comment: Corrupt family dealings obviously don't need offices!

Blue and White party member Omer Yankelevich at the Knesset, in Jerusalem, May 14, 2019.
Omer Yankelevich, Israel's first-ever female ultra-Orthodox minister, announced Tuesday that she was leaving Benny Gantz's Blue and White party and would not run in the upcoming March 23 Knesset elections.
Yankelevich, the Diaspora affairs minister, had been considered one of the closest allies of party leader Gantz.
But she has recently been at the center of increasing tensions within the centrist party, and ended up joining an avalanche of members departing the crumbling party, which won 14 seats in last year's election (in an alliance with Yair Lapid's Yesh Atid and Moshe Ya'alon's Telem, which won a total of 33) but is now teetering on the edge of extinction, according to recent opinion polls.
Republicans have been vilified for making similar claims about the 2020 presidential race.
In the congressional race for New York's 22nd district, Republican Claudia Tenney currently leads incumbent Democrat Anthony Brindisi by a razor-thin margin of 125 votes. Tenney declared victory on Tuesday, though challenges continue.
In a legal filing Monday requesting a manual audit of the election, Elias, whose Perkins Coie law firm is representing Brindisi, argued that there were "substantial errors and irregularities in the conduct of the election."
Comment: Marc Elias, of Perkins Coie infamy, has a long, tawdry history as a Clinton operative:
- Perkins Coie lawyer behind Russian dossier worked to undermine Bernie Sanders as well as Trump
- Kamala Harris campaign lawyer, Mark Elias, was responsible for hiring Fusion GPS for Clinton presidential run
- Will Christopher Steele turn on Killary if hauled before federal investigators?
- Another lie? Killary claims she didn't know about Trump dossier until after its publication
- Alleged Clinton campaign strategist: Hillary PERSONALLY approved decision to pay for Trump dossier, called it her "secret weapon"
Cardona doesn't, in fact, have much of a paper trail. After working as an elementary school teacher and principal, he became an assistant superintendent for Connecticut's Meriden School District (which serves about 8,000 students) in 2015. He was appointed Connecticut's education commissioner in August 2019, where he served for a little over a year before being tapped for the presidential Cabinet.
But during his tenure as commissioner, Cardona was a trailblazer in one respect that merits strict scrutiny during his confirmation hearing this week: he oversaw the creation of America's first state-mandated ethnic-studies course.
The Connecticut legislature determined that all high schools must offer — though students need not necessarily take — a year-long "African-American, Black, Latino, and Puerto Rican Course of Studies." Proponents of ethnic studies claim, reasonably enough, that it is beneficial for minority students to see people of their ethnic background represented in the curriculum. Stanford University professor Thomas Dee, who authored a study showing GPA and attendance benefits from an ethnic-studies elective for San Francisco high school students, suggests that a "high quality" ethnic-studies curriculum effectively stresses "the considerable cultural assets" of minorities and their capacity to achieve.
But "ethnic studies" can also denote academic indoctrination into the political dogma of critical race theory, which holds that all whites are oppressors, that America is an inherently racist country, and that for nonwhite people to be "liberated" or for white people to be "anti-racist," we must interpret human affairs through the lens of identity politics and advocate on behalf of left-wing causes.
Comment: Doesn't look like they're going to challenge him on critical race theory:
Miguel Cardona, President Joe Biden's nominee for Education secretary, breezed through his Senate confirmation hearing on Wednesday, winning some bipartisan support even amid an increasingly contentious national political debate over reopening schools during the pandemic.
...
On Wednesday, Cardona avoided nearly any contentious exchanges during two-and-a-half-hours of questioning that was largely collegial from both sides of the aisle. His nomination appears to be on track for bipartisan support.
Washington should not abandon the Afghan peace process, the report said. But conditions for its success will not be met by a May 1 deadline set in a 2020 U.S.-Taliban agreement. Withdrawing all U.S. troops then could lead to civil war, destabilizing the region and reviving the al Qaeda threat.
The United States "should not...simply hand a victory to the Taliban," said the Afghanistan Study Group report, reflecting criticism that the Trump administration conceded too much to the insurgents in a bid to end America's longest war.
Congress commissioned the group, whose co-chairs included retired Marine General Joseph Dunford, a former Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman, and Republican former Senator Kelly Ayotte.
Dunford told reporters the report was shared with aides to President Joe Biden, including Zalmay Khalilzad, the peace negotiator kept on from the Trump administration, who "found it helpful."
Comment: The above is a propaganda piece designed to make readers think that the US is actually justified in keeping US troops in Afghanistan; something Trump saw the utter wastefulness of.
And speaking of predictable military reversals, it doesn't end there - and actually gets even worse in Germany:
The US will halt its planned withdrawal of 12,000 troops from Germany while the Pentagon conducts a review of the Trump-era plans, the head of the US European Command said on Wednesday.Translation: "There's no way in hell we're gonna withdraw troops from Germany and loosen the pressure on Russia."
The plans have been "put on freeze" while new US Secretary of Defense, Lloyd Austin, is "in the process of conducting a very thorough review" of the policy, Air Force General Tod Wolters told reporters, without giving a timeframe for the audit.
The planned drawdown included relocating the US European Command from the city of Stuttgart to Belgium and returning the 2nd Cavalry Regiment, currently based in the German town of Vilseck, to the US.
Only 6,000 of the troops scheduled to leave Germany were set to return to the US, with some also intended for deployment to the Baltic region.
Every single one of them are on hold, and will be reexamined [so as] to have a comprehensive look at all the options, from A to Z, so you can take a strategic examination on every one of those options," Wolter added.
Then-president Donald Trump ordered the removal of some of the 34,000 US troops posted in Germany, accusing the fellow NATO member of being "very delinquent" and "making a fortune" off American soldiers.
Wolters and Trump's Defense Secretary at the time, Mark Esper, have both previously said taking US troops from Germany and posting them elsewhere would increase security in Europe.
However, a bipartisan group of American lawmakers questioned how the move would allow the US and NATO to keep up their pressure on Russia over Crimea.
The troop-change plans angered officials in Germany when they were announced last summer, including Bavarian Prime Minister Markus Soeder, who said: "We very much regret the US government's decision."
Defense Secretary Austin has reportedly assured his German counterpart, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, that the US will liaise with Germany over similar moves in the future, according to Reuters.

Clashes erupted during a demonstration against Erdogan's appointment of a party loyalist to head Istanbul's exclusive Bogazici UniversityBurcin Gercek and Fulya Ozerkan in Istanbul
More than 300 students and their supporters were detained in Istanbul and the capital Ankara in increasingly violent and politically-charged altercations with the police this week.
The protests first erupted after Erdogan named party loyalist Melih Bulu as the head of Istanbul's elite Bogazici University at the start of the year.
The appointment created a stir because students saw it as part of Erdogan's broader effort to centralise control over most facets of Turks' daily lives.
Comment: See also:
- Empires of the steppes fuel Erdogan Khan's dreams - and he's desperate
- Turkey to hold social media sites to account, will restrict bandwidth of repeat offenders
- Turkey's migrant busses, tear gas attacks and fake news stunts at the Greek border
- Hagia Sophia to become mosque again after Turkey's state council annuls 1934 ruling
- Revolution underway in NATO protectorate Turkey? Istanbul Occupied (2016)

Settlement Affairs Minister Tzachi Hanegbi in Gush Etzion in the West Bank, December 24, 2020.
A Likud minister close to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday the US will never attack Iran's nuclear program, and Israel will have to decide whether to launch such a strike alone or come to terms with a nuclear-armed Islamic Republic.
The statement came as tensions heated in the Middle East, with Iran ramping up its nuclear program with ongoing violations of its 2015 deal with world powers, and the US and Israel issuing threats and warnings.
Some of the activity is tied to the changing of the guard at the White House. The Trump administration stepped up its pressure on Iran as its tenure drew to a close, while the Biden administration is expected to take a softer approach, despite opposition from Israel and its other regional allies.
"The United States will never attack the nuclear facilities in Iran. Israel must decide whether it will accept a nuclear Iran," Tzachi Hanegbi told the Kan public broadcaster. "Israel will be forced to act independently to remove this danger."
Comment: So US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is carrying water for Netanyahu who's been making assertions that a nuclear Iran is imminent - for the past 30 years or so. None of which bodes well for peace in the Middle East.
- Israel claims Iran will have enough enriched uranium for 1 nuke in 6 months, twice as long as Biden admin estimate
- Ahead of trip to IDF long-range strike HQ, Gantz warns Israel can't rule out attack on nuclear Iran
- Dangerous escalation in the Middle East: The US and Israel go hand in glove for the next battle against Iran
- Israel's top general says its military is refreshing operational plans against Iran
- 'Enough is enough': Iran calls on world community to force Israel to destroy its nukes











Comment: It probably shouldn't come as a surprise to see how the corruption of science has governments and people singing the praise of things they should fear the most.