As has been obvious from the outset, Donald is not a ‘Kremlin puppet’. With him today vowing to pull out of a nuclear deal with Russia (INF), and with Politico reporting that the Mueller investigation has basically led nowhere, that official conspiracy theory can surely finally die, (though its proponents will of course face no comeuppance and will continue to earn $$$ propagandizing for corporate media).
What Trump IS, is a puppet of corporate, Neoconservative USA - and an even more easy-to-control puppet than Obama, it seems. But without Obama’s ‘liberal’ (pro-LGBT, feminist, pro-choice) mask.
The system/ruling elite pulling the strings of every US President seek no less than total global domination. As well as being an embarrassment to the US brand, and thus a hindrance to continued US imperialism, Trump initially showed some signs that he would go against this system - professing a desire for better relations with Russia, threatening to pull out of Syria - so an unhinged ‘red-scare’ was recreated, with outlandish allegations of Trump-Putin ‘collusion’, so as to topple this unmasked face of America, or at least to bring him into line and prevent any possibility of a more peaceful relationship with Russia. Any apparent attempt by Trump to seek a better relationship with Russia - or even just to meet with Putin - was met with cries of ‘Putin puppet!’ from the corporate media. (Whether Trump ever actually wanted better relations with Russia, I doubt).
The puppeteers almost had the predictable, reliably militaristic, ‘liberal’ Hillary Clinton, to oversee their continued imperial pursuits, corporate rule, and ever-expanding Orwellian control of society, but instead they got an embarrassing, overtly inhumane buffoon, who is completely destroying any illusion of the US as a bastion of humanity and freedom in the world. And who also, unfortunately (for us), is proving to be even more dangerous than those before him.
We need an anti-war movement. And we need to overthrow our neoliberal capitalist system (aka corporate dictatorship) that will not and cannot accept a multi-polar world order. It would rather drive us to total destruction than accept this, either via environmental devastation/climate-change, or via nuclear war with other powers (Russia/China), as it continues to spread like a disease throughout the world.
We need to give power back to the people. How propagandised have we been to believe that a system of perpetual growth and profit (for those at the top) is good and sustainable for our little planet? Trump is just a product of this system. It’s time to reverse our doomed trajectory and put people and planet before corporate profit!
Saturday, 20 October 2018
Tuesday, 2 October 2018
Documentary illustrates why we desperately need a Jeremy Corbyn government
Watch this documentary.
The financial system of offshore tax havens, set up after the fall of the British Empire to maintain a less obvious kind of colonialism, has facilitated the looting of developing countries, and the formation of corrupt governments that work in the interests of a financial elite, not the people.
We’re ruled by psychopathic crooks. To save the planet and its inhabitants, we’ve no option but to try and change the horrific system of perpetual plunder and oppression by an unaccountable, mercenary elite. Making lifelong social justice and peace campaigner Jeremy Corbyn PM would give us our best shot at doing so.
Join Labour. We can only do this as a collective!
The financial system of offshore tax havens, set up after the fall of the British Empire to maintain a less obvious kind of colonialism, has facilitated the looting of developing countries, and the formation of corrupt governments that work in the interests of a financial elite, not the people.
We’re ruled by psychopathic crooks. To save the planet and its inhabitants, we’ve no option but to try and change the horrific system of perpetual plunder and oppression by an unaccountable, mercenary elite. Making lifelong social justice and peace campaigner Jeremy Corbyn PM would give us our best shot at doing so.
Join Labour. We can only do this as a collective!
Saturday, 22 September 2018
Michael Palin in North Korea
I just finished watching the first episode of Michael Palin in North Korea, broadcast on mainstream UK television. Whilst I found it to be a fairly respectful insight, (comparatively to most western media), Palin frequently points to the propaganda in NK, whilst parroting western propaganda tropes about the country. Quite ironic! (No one beats USA when it comes to propaganda!).
He goes into a hairdressers & points at a poster of models all with similar hairstyles, (as if to suggest that all citizens have to look the same, and perhaps look similar to Kim Jong Un). In reality this is no different to most barbershops in the UK, which often have such posters of models with slight variations of a ‘short back & sides’ hairstyle. And let’s not forget that most westerners, like a herd of sheep, follow trends – hairstyles, fashion, interior design, gadgets, etc – which are set by corporations via advertising so as to constantly create new opportunities for revenue. Is this really any better than copying the hairstyle of your country’s leader?
He observes frequent statues and imagery of the leaders, and the badges of them that many citizens proudly wear on their jacket lapels. Is this so different from statues in other countries, of royalty, presidents, 'founding fathers' etc? I have been to Thailand several times, and the admiration that they have there for their late King was visible everywhere. Regarding the badges, is this not comparable to seemingly every other home in America proudly displaying the stars and stripes on the porch? The patriotism/nationalism in the US is more noticeable than any other country I have visited. Presidents who oversaw violent coups and illegal invasions of foreign countries, are lionized. The extremely bloodied flag is on display everywhere. Surely there is no citizenry more brainwashed than the American populace?
There’s little context to explain why NK is the way it is. Their militarism is understandable - I wonder if Michael even knows that America has been surrounding the region with military bases. Plus obviously there is their militarism/war games in the South, their refusal to sign peace treaties, their recent regime change interventions in other countries…
When he arrives, by train from China, into the north of the country, he is told to stop filming. He proclaims that this is the ‘first sign of authoritarian rule’. In reality, this is no different to arriving in many countries. I have been shouted at for filming in LA airport.
I am not saying NK isn’t repressive – it seems clear that citizens have little choice but to respect their system/ruler - but how much of this authoritarianism is a result of a need to unite against a very real imperial threat (from the same country that decimated their land and people in the 1950s)?
And perhaps they actually have some freedoms that many westerners do not have? The freedom to live in dignity; to not have to worry about basic needs, because the communist system prioritises that; the freedom to not be constantly manipulated and mentally abused by a virulent corporate state; the freedom to not be forced (due to poverty) into the military to fight in imperial wars...
I look forward to the rest of the series. Hopefully Michael comes to realise that he is just as/more propagandised than the people of North Korea.
Notes on episode 2:
Michael seems to find it odd that an elderly farmer does not want to talk about the famine of the 1990s. The insinuation is that citizens are fearful of talking about any negative aspects of North Korean leadership. But it is hardly unreasonable for her to not wish to discuss what must have been an extremely traumatic time, during which she may have lost loved ones.
He questions his guide as to why North Koreans don't criticize their leadership, and is somewhat dismayed by her response - that the leadership genuinely represents the people, so to criticize it is to criticize oneself. Palin shows his naivety in suggesting that western leaders also care about the people, and that we are still free to criticize them - it is not really true that leaders of neoliberal capitalist countries care about the people; they are mostly just puppets of the 'free market'/corporations. Profit is the priority).
Unfortunately there was no acknowledgement by Michael at the end that he is himself a victim of (western) propaganda, but he did at least say that the country was not the brutal and unhappy place that he had expected.
He goes into a hairdressers & points at a poster of models all with similar hairstyles, (as if to suggest that all citizens have to look the same, and perhaps look similar to Kim Jong Un). In reality this is no different to most barbershops in the UK, which often have such posters of models with slight variations of a ‘short back & sides’ hairstyle. And let’s not forget that most westerners, like a herd of sheep, follow trends – hairstyles, fashion, interior design, gadgets, etc – which are set by corporations via advertising so as to constantly create new opportunities for revenue. Is this really any better than copying the hairstyle of your country’s leader?
He observes frequent statues and imagery of the leaders, and the badges of them that many citizens proudly wear on their jacket lapels. Is this so different from statues in other countries, of royalty, presidents, 'founding fathers' etc? I have been to Thailand several times, and the admiration that they have there for their late King was visible everywhere. Regarding the badges, is this not comparable to seemingly every other home in America proudly displaying the stars and stripes on the porch? The patriotism/nationalism in the US is more noticeable than any other country I have visited. Presidents who oversaw violent coups and illegal invasions of foreign countries, are lionized. The extremely bloodied flag is on display everywhere. Surely there is no citizenry more brainwashed than the American populace?
There’s little context to explain why NK is the way it is. Their militarism is understandable - I wonder if Michael even knows that America has been surrounding the region with military bases. Plus obviously there is their militarism/war games in the South, their refusal to sign peace treaties, their recent regime change interventions in other countries…
When he arrives, by train from China, into the north of the country, he is told to stop filming. He proclaims that this is the ‘first sign of authoritarian rule’. In reality, this is no different to arriving in many countries. I have been shouted at for filming in LA airport.
I am not saying NK isn’t repressive – it seems clear that citizens have little choice but to respect their system/ruler - but how much of this authoritarianism is a result of a need to unite against a very real imperial threat (from the same country that decimated their land and people in the 1950s)?
And perhaps they actually have some freedoms that many westerners do not have? The freedom to live in dignity; to not have to worry about basic needs, because the communist system prioritises that; the freedom to not be constantly manipulated and mentally abused by a virulent corporate state; the freedom to not be forced (due to poverty) into the military to fight in imperial wars...
I look forward to the rest of the series. Hopefully Michael comes to realise that he is just as/more propagandised than the people of North Korea.
Notes on episode 2:
Michael seems to find it odd that an elderly farmer does not want to talk about the famine of the 1990s. The insinuation is that citizens are fearful of talking about any negative aspects of North Korean leadership. But it is hardly unreasonable for her to not wish to discuss what must have been an extremely traumatic time, during which she may have lost loved ones.
He questions his guide as to why North Koreans don't criticize their leadership, and is somewhat dismayed by her response - that the leadership genuinely represents the people, so to criticize it is to criticize oneself. Palin shows his naivety in suggesting that western leaders also care about the people, and that we are still free to criticize them - it is not really true that leaders of neoliberal capitalist countries care about the people; they are mostly just puppets of the 'free market'/corporations. Profit is the priority).
Unfortunately there was no acknowledgement by Michael at the end that he is himself a victim of (western) propaganda, but he did at least say that the country was not the brutal and unhappy place that he had expected.
Tuesday, 11 September 2018
9/11: Never Forgot...
#NeverForget the millions of Arabs killed/maimed/displaced by the imperial wars fought by the US+allies following 9/11, (and before).
#NeverForget that the 9/11 hijackers came from Saudi Arabia, yet it is Iran that America nonsensically describes as the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism, whilst Saudi remains a close ally.
#NeverForget that al Qaeda was born out of America’s support for the Mujahideen in the 1980s.
#NeverForget the war propaganda - the WMD lie, the ‘Saddam is working with al Qaeda’ lie, the ‘Gaddafi is going to massacre Benghazi’ lie, the ‘Assad is gassing his own people’ lie, the ‘Houthis are an Iranian proxy’ lie... etc.
#NeverForget that the US, having ostensibly set out to defeat al Qaeda, was just a decade later supporting them and their ilk in Libya/Syria (just as they were in the 1980s), and is now allied with them in Yemen.
#NeverForget that the ‘War On Terror’ has been a farce from day one; a ploy to enable imperial plunder of the Middle East and beyond.
#NeverForget the attacks on our civil liberties.
#NeverForget that the US is the bloodiest inflictor of terror that the planet has ever seen.
#NeverForget that the US is by far the greatest threat to world peace and progress, and that this was the case long before Trump came along.
#NeverForget that the 9/11 hijackers came from Saudi Arabia, yet it is Iran that America nonsensically describes as the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism, whilst Saudi remains a close ally.
#NeverForget that al Qaeda was born out of America’s support for the Mujahideen in the 1980s.
#NeverForget the war propaganda - the WMD lie, the ‘Saddam is working with al Qaeda’ lie, the ‘Gaddafi is going to massacre Benghazi’ lie, the ‘Assad is gassing his own people’ lie, the ‘Houthis are an Iranian proxy’ lie... etc.
#NeverForget that the US, having ostensibly set out to defeat al Qaeda, was just a decade later supporting them and their ilk in Libya/Syria (just as they were in the 1980s), and is now allied with them in Yemen.
#NeverForget that the ‘War On Terror’ has been a farce from day one; a ploy to enable imperial plunder of the Middle East and beyond.
#NeverForget the attacks on our civil liberties.
#NeverForget that the US is the bloodiest inflictor of terror that the planet has ever seen.
#NeverForget that the US is by far the greatest threat to world peace and progress, and that this was the case long before Trump came along.
Monday, 10 September 2018
The Skripal Suspects
(Note: I have no issue believing that Russian secret services, like those of other countries, assassinate people. But, at a time when there is a blatant agenda in the west to demonise Putin and provoke Russia via NATO expansion, I think it is completely rational and responsible to treat all western government claims against Russia extremely skeptically).
I just watched the full 30 minute interview on RT with the two Salisbury suspects, named - without providing any supportive evidence - as GRU agents, by Theresa May. (On the same day, UK police have said that they had no evidence of this). As ever, the corporate/state media in the west reported the government's claims unquestioningly. (On matters of ‘national security’ and foreign policy, the corporate media is almost entirely a mouthpiece for the state. Or, perhaps it’s more accurate to say that it is they who set the agenda?).
In the interview, the suspects come across to me as very nervous and edgy. Are they nervous and edgy because they really are innocent, ordinary citizens, and this attention has all come as a complete shock? Are they nervous and edgy because the Russian state is forcing them to give this interview and fabricate an alibi? I've no idea. Personally, I don’t find their alibi - that they were just tourists visiting Salisbury - quite as implausible as some. Salisbury was one of Lonely Planet’s top 10 city destinations in 2014. As this article in the Salisbury Journal states, 'the tourism business is booming in Salisbury with significant increases in overseas visitors'. Though, for sure, their story is definitely highly questionable.
The main issue, obviously, is that they just happened to visit the city at pretty much the exact time that the Skripals were poisoned. Is this just too much of a coincidence? How often exactly are Russian tourists visiting the city?
If it weren’t for the absurdity of the 'Putin did it' narrative, I’d be much more inclined to completely right-off the theory that this could just be a coincidence. Perhaps it is bizarre to say that two Russian nationals just innocently happened to be in Salisbury, 400 yards from the Skripal’s house, on the same day as their poisoning, but the official theory is also bizarre:
Russia had a longstanding program of putting poison onto door handles, and they decided to utilize it going after a spy pardoned years ago in a spy swap, (thus jeopardising future spy swaps), just before the World Cup (and Russian election), when the Kremlin was focussed on selling a positive image of Russia to the world.
The GRU assassins, who failed to assassinate their target, made no attempt to cover their tracks, flying in straight from Moscow, using public transport, operating in broad daylight, with no proper protective clothing, using a (10x deadlier than VX) Soviet poison that would instantly be linked to Russia. And afterwards, they just flung the poison bottle away in the centre of Salisbury. They made no attempt to hide from CCTV, nor to quickly escape the scene of the crime.
These are some unbelievably careless assassins! Or are we to believe that this was intentional - that Putin wanted them to be discovered? That Putin wanted to carry out a brazen act of terrorism on British soil to show the world that Russia is now, once again, a force to be reckoned with? This is the theory that some in corporate media are pushing. Unless you believe Putin to be a deranged madman with massive delusions of grandeur, who doesn’t care at all about Russia’s image in the world, or about the Russian economy - he must really want those sanctions - then this theory seems extremely illogical/absurd.
If it really was a Kremlin job, it must have been about something other than Skripal just being a traitor - as explained, that theory makes little sense, given that he was released years ago, the timing, etc. It must have been about something that he has been up to in the years since his pardoning. Surely British security services will know more about what he's been doing with himself? That they, the government, and the corporate media insist that it was simply an attack on a traitor by the (clearly unhinged and power-hungry) Putin, makes me extremely suspicious.
Some questions/notes:
Why was the site in Salisbury turned upside down, pets killed etc, but the hotel in east London - where traces of the poison were supposedly also found - wasn’t?
The Skripals left home at 09.15. The suspects arrived into Salisbury station at 11.48. How had the Skripals managed to get back to their home, and touch the door handle, in the hour between noon and 1pm, without being caught on any of the CCTV cameras that caught them going out and caught the Russian visitors so extensively? After this remarkably invisible journey, what time did they touch the door handle?
Why was a D-notice put out re Pablo Miller?
Why has it taken so long to reveal these suspects? The timing seems convenient, just before the first PMQs after the Summer, allowing Theresa to grandstand. Plus useful to distract from Brexit chaos etc.
Why little mention that Russia got rid of their chemical weapons (according to OPCW) last year? (Unlike many western countries!).
Why did Charlie Rowley say that the poison bottle was sealed when he found it?
Why is no one in the media being allowed to question the Skripals? Why was GPS on both Skripals’ phones switched off for four hours on the day they were poisoned? What has Sergei Skripal been doing in the years since being pardoned by Russia?
Why did the U.K. refuse to provide the fingerprints and visa application forms of the suspects to Russia?
Why has BBC’s Mark Urban not spoken about the fact he had contacts with Sergei Skripal six months before the incident?
Would assassins really use public transport? Surely a car would be used, to avoid CCTV and unreliable public transport? Given the UK weather forecast - heavy snow, storms etc - if you were an assassin, wouldn’t you delay the job until the bad weather was over?
It was originally thought that the Skripals had been exposed to opioids. When was it determined that it was in fact a nerve agent ‘of a type developed by Russia’?
Many other Russians have died in the UK under suspicious circumstances - many with links to the Russian mafia - with no such media reaction and casting of blame, as with the Skripals. Why is this? In previous cases, despite the US insisting that the Kremlin was behind the deaths, the UK authorities have insisted that this was not the case.
How is it possible that the Met Police do not know what kind of visas the suspects travelled on?
The NATO-affiliated Bellingcat group claims to have discovered that Petrov and Boshirov’s passports were of a series issued only to Russian spies, and that their visa applications listed GRU headquarters as their address. How is it possible that UK security services didn't spot this when they applied for their visas? Surely they would have done, and they subsequently would have been monitored closely by MI6 during their time in the UK?
Why did Sergei, at first, not think that the Kremlin was behind the assassination attempt? And why does that claim, by the Guardian's Luke Harding, completely contradict what Sergei's best friend, Ross Cassidy, has said? Cassidy says that Sergei had feared retribution and seemed ‘spooked’ in the lead up to the attack - he even changed his mobile phone amid concern it was being monitored. If this is true, then Sergei will surely have assumed immediately that it was the Kremlin that was responsible for the assassination attempt? Why would Luke Harding, and others, be lying about this?
Why have the Skripals not been in touch with their family in Russia?
This former Israeli expert on international terrorism, finds the theory that these evidently extremely careless and incompetent suspects were decorated GRU agents to be totally absurd.
Michael Pozner, a respected journalist/broadcaster who had a show on US television during the first Cold War, gives a talk here at Yale University - the entire talk is worth listening to, but he speaks about the Skripal debacle in the last 5 minutes, and is also highly skeptical of the theory that Putin would have assassinated Sergei.
If anyone can think of any other questions; any inconsistencies etc in the official narrative, please comment! (And tell me if I’ve got anything wrong). I recommend reading this great article by Jonathan Cook, which sums up why none of these questions will likely be asked in the corporate media.
Whatever happened in Salisbury, there is clearly much that we are not being told, and this whole sorry debacle needs to be looked at in context of the west’s anti-Russia agenda, which has been ongoing for years. It is clear that conclusions have been jumped to; that the UK government decided that ‘Putin did it’ without awaiting proof, and despite the lack of logic in such an assertion. In such a scenario, the media, security services etc, are inclined to desperately seek supportive evidence, and perhaps manufacture it, in order to back-up the government's claim, and are likely (as is clearly happening) to ignore that which contradicts/questions it.
Finally, if this really was a Kremlin hit, it is absolutely absurd for the west to act righteous. No one beats them, when it comes to killing people with chemical weapons.
Friday, 7 September 2018
Alex Jones removed from Twitter
Surely it is no coincidence that just after Twitter’s CEO is questioned in Washington, Alex Jones is removed from Twitter? Clearly these social media giants will do as they’re told if put under enough pressure.
Anti-establishment, anti-imperialist leftists will also be targeted (we already are) - we are equally despised by the elite. I’m convinced that ultimately we are the real target for suppression. Jones is just a useful excuse to get the censorship underway.
The powers that be must realise that banning Jones will only embolden his following/make them more extreme. The strategy I think is to divide us, even more than we already are. Social media provides us with an opportunity for unity - a huge threat to elite domination. Best to keep us fighting each other.
Instead of censorship, how should the likes of Jones be defeated? Simple: our rulers should stop being corrupt, war-profiteering, corporatist, greedy, lying bastards. But unfortunately all of that is in their DNA, and required, to sustain the horrific system that we live under.
Anti-establishment, anti-imperialist leftists will also be targeted (we already are) - we are equally despised by the elite. I’m convinced that ultimately we are the real target for suppression. Jones is just a useful excuse to get the censorship underway.
The powers that be must realise that banning Jones will only embolden his following/make them more extreme. The strategy I think is to divide us, even more than we already are. Social media provides us with an opportunity for unity - a huge threat to elite domination. Best to keep us fighting each other.
Instead of censorship, how should the likes of Jones be defeated? Simple: our rulers should stop being corrupt, war-profiteering, corporatist, greedy, lying bastards. But unfortunately all of that is in their DNA, and required, to sustain the horrific system that we live under.
Thursday, 9 August 2018
The splintering of social media - divide and rule?
They say that social media needs to be ‘regulated’ (censored) because it is divisive, but...
‘Regulating’ social media platforms will just lead to the splintering of them as people seek other, smaller platforms on which to express their views instead. Thus meaning an even greater tendency to get stuck in echo chambers, and more divisiveness, not less.
Whilst we’re all on the same platform, we’ve the potential to debate, unite, and threaten the system. It’s this that is the real threat.
Divide and rule.
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