Puppet Masters
"Anti-McCain twitter seems to have reached new heights (or depths) of repulsiveness," tweeted Iraq-raping PNAC founder Bill Kristol to thunderous applause from #Resistance Twitter. "In the hope that a few of the haters see this, let me say: I'm proud to have voted for John McCain for president three times (2000 & 2008 primaries & 2008 general), and for Donald Trump...never."
"John McCain reminds us that American greatness is made by those who understand that character is the sum of one's hardest choices; that reality is not a TV show; that fame is mist but honor granite; that heroes don't need fixers on retainer," the Washington Post's David Von Drehle preemptively eulogized in a nauseating article titled "John McCain isn't the ideal messenger. He's the ideal message."
There is a lot of talk these days about the psychopaths ruling the world. A study among high executives of large companies, published under the title Snakes in Suits, shows that psychopathic traits are widespread among them.[1] This naturally reflects into collective forms of psychopathy: in The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power, Joel Bakan noted that "corporate behavior is very similar to that of a psychopath."[2]
Some states also behave like psychopaths among nations. The USA is such a state, with a "pathology of power" (the title of Norman Cousins's 1987 book) probably related to the degree of psychopathy of the men in charge. Behind the mask of sanity and morality displayed by the US on the world's stage, there is a "deep state" moved by an insatiable thirst for power and uninhibited by any moral conscience or empathy; this pathological deep state is today in almost complete control of US foreign policy.
Comment: As Dr Kevin Barrett commented in a forward to this article:
According to one expert on political psychopathy, Andrzej Lobaczewski, author of Political Ponerology, the answer is yes. Whole nations, even international political movements, can exhibit behavior that parallels that of psychopathic individuals.
Lobaczewski, a Polish psychiatrist, diagnosed psychopathic symptoms among the Communist-era leadership. He argued that individuals with personality disorders, especially psychopathy, tend to gravitate to positions of power, which can set off a contagion in which the entire regime takes on psychopathic characteristics.

Beijing, 7 May 2018: Kim Jong-un & Xi Jinping meet for the second time in two months (...and no, they are not sitting on their interpreters!)
The situation in North Korea is really quite bleak. Consider, for example, this recent piece in a United Nations periodical titled "The 5 most under-reported humanitarian crises that are happening right now". Heading the list is this blurb on North Korea:
"....what has been drastically underreported in the last year is that unprecedented number of people who are going hungry. The UN estimates that 70 percent of the population, or 18 million people, are food-insecure and reliant on government aid. To make things worse, last year North Korea experienced its worst drought in 16 years, exacerbating an already dire food shortage. With tight control of its borders keeping out aid organizations and journalists, it's almost impossible to capture how many are actually receiving the urgent food aid they need." (U.N. Dispatch)
Cute how this works: Kick off the week with some "the Department of Justice is not going to be extorted" bombast from Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, by which he rationalizes that his defiance of subpoenas and slow-walking document production to Congress - which is probing investigative irregularities related to the 2016 campaign - is required by DOJ policy and "the rule of law." Then end the week with the Friday-night bad-news dump: the grudging removal of DOJ and FBI redactions from a House Intelligence Committee report on Russia's election meddling.
Now that we can see what they wanted to conceal, it is clear, yet again, that the Justice Department and the FBI cannot be trusted to decide what the public gets to learn about their decision-making.
Comment: What this tells us is that there are more purposes to redaction than protecting critical information on behalf of the innocent or in deference to the integrity of a legal case. It is also used to shape a case to meet a false requirement by blocking evidence to the contrary.
A year later the mood is transformed.
Kim Jong-un - North Korea's much demonised Great Leader - has now held successful summit meetings with Chinese President Xi Jinping and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, and is negotiating the terms of a summit meeting with US President Donald Trump.
Meanwhile North and South Korea have fielded a joint Olympic team at the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, North Korea has announced a freeze of its ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programme, and the leaders of the two Koreas - Kim Jong-un and Moon Jae-in - have publicly committed themselves to negotiating a peace treaty between their two countries and to the total denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula.
What changed?
Comment: President Trump has just pulled the US out of the JCPOA. What is the take-away message for Kim-Jong-un?
How do you know Trump's "not a suspect?"
I've been hearing that question a lot these days. News reports indicate that Special Counsel Robert Mueller may try to coerce President Trump's testimony by issuing a grand-jury subpoena if the president does not agree to a "voluntary" interview. That has sparked a public debate over the question of whether Mueller, an inferior executive officer, has such authority to strong-arm the chief executive - the official in whom the Constitution reposes all executive power, including the power that Mueller exercises only as long as the president permits it.
I don't think he does.
To be clear, there is no question that Mueller, as a special counsel, is a federal prosecutor who has the authority to issue grand-jury subpoenas. But everyone who works in the Justice Department has a boss, including the attorney general (who answers to the president). As special counsel, Mueller answers to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein (because Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself from the so-called Russia investigation). That means Mueller has the authority to issue a subpoena to the president unless Rosenstein - or the president - tells him not to.
Before we come to whether the deputy AG should clip the special counsel's wings, let's address one point of confusion. Many people believe, as I do, that the president should not be subjected to questioning by a prosecutor on the facts as we presently know them. From that premise, however, they argue that Mueller may not subpoena the president, or that the president may ignore any subpoena. Neither of those things is true.
Comment: So far, there is no convincing reason for Trump to submit to a Mueller interview. If there was, it would have taken place by now. In that it hasn't, the president should leave well enough alone.
Titled "National ideas and strategic aims for the development of the Russian Federation by 2024" the 17-point decree, "in force as of today," touches on dozens of areas from mortgages, to road safety, and the creation of a national youth orchestra. Here are the highlights...
Joining the big five
According to the document, Russia is to become one of the world's five biggest economies, maintaining GDP growth above the global average, while retaining macroeconomic stability.
Measured by nominal GDP, Russia is outside the top 10 biggest economies, and would have to produce near double-digit growth to catch up in the next six years. However, using purchasing power parity GDP, which is a better measure of the real value of the economy, Russia sits in sixth place, just behind Germany, so the target is not unrealistic, and hitting it would help halve poverty, another stated aim in Putin's plan.
Now that the memos have been perused, the theories of a number of such legal commentators, which were based on sketchy information to begin with, have unsurprisingly proved to be full of errors, irrelevancies, and overstatements. Rather than walk back their defense of Comey's leaks, however, they have doubled down on heroizing him.
No, Comey's Memos Are Not His Personal Property
Last May, the Washington Post called White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders a liar for saying Comey leaked privileged information. At the time, legal professor Jonathan Turley wrote eloquently in her defense. Today, he confirms his position, arguing that the media continue to allow their bias to overwhelm their objectivity in reporting on Comey's culpability.
"The New York Times story is utter nonsense," national security adviser John Bolton said in a statement. Bolton said the Pentagon has not discussed a troop drawdown with South Korea. "The President has not asked the Pentagon to provide options for reducing American forces stationed in South Korea," he added.
The Times reported late Thursday that President Trump had asked the Pentagon to consider reducing the number of troops on the Korean Peninsula. The request reportedly worried military officials who raised concerns that it could undercut U.S. ties with South Korea and alarm Japan.
Pentagon spokeswoman Dana White also dismissed the report at a briefing on Thursday. "This department has not gotten any word on that," White said about a possible withdrawal. "Our posture remains the same."
Comment: This is how 'not news' becomes 'news.' The source of the story isn't verified before MSM goes to print or the story is meant to alter the facts. Either way, the public is misinformed.

Beijing, 7 May 2018: Kim Jong-un & Xi Jinping meet for the second time in two months (...and no, they are not sitting on their interpreters!)
"Xi held talks with Kim and hosted a welcome banquet for him," China's state-run Xinhua agency reported on Tuesday. Chinese state media have confirmed that the leaders shared a "cordial and friendly atmosphere" during the talks and a luncheon in the Chinese city of Dalian.
The duo discussed bilateral relations between Beijing and Pyongyang as well as "issues of common concern."
Kim said that there would be "no need" for North Korea to be a nuclear state as soon as "relevant parties abolish their hostile policies and remove security threats."
Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump, who is to meet Kim in the nearest future, tweeted that he will discuss North Korea with the Chinese leader on Tuesday morning.
Comment: If Bolton gets his way and NK 'denuclearization' "follows the Libya model", China has pledged support to NK should the US 'overreach' its welcome. Then again, his agenda may be to provoke NK into not 'denuclearizing'. The Deep State needs the Korean peninsula on a permanent war footing.













Comment: Lest you think the author's opinion is extreme, here is a tiny sample of the havoc McCain has wrought over his blood-soaked too-long political career.