theguardian | Mexico’s president has written to his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, urging him to help control shipments of fentanyl, while also complaining of “rude” US pressure to curb the drug trade.
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has previously said that fentanyl is the US’s problem and is caused by “a lack of hugs” in US families.
On Tuesday he read out the letter to Xi dated 22 March in which he
defended efforts to curb supply of the deadly drug, while rounding on US
critics.
López
Obrador complained about calls in the US to designate Mexican drug
gangs as terrorist organisations. Some Republicans have said they favour
using the US military to crack down on Mexican cartels.
“Unjustly,
they are blaming us for problems that in large measure have to do with
their loss of values, their welfare crisis,” López Obrador wrote to Xi
in the letter.
“These positions are in
themselves a lack of respect and a threat to our sovereignty, and
moreover they are based on an absurd, manipulative, propagandistic and
demagogic attitude.”
Only after several
paragraphs of venting, López Obrador brings up China’s exports of
fentanyl precursors, and asked him to help stop shipments of chemicals
that Mexican cartels import from China.
“I
write to you, President Xi Jinping, not to ask your help on these rude
threats, but to ask you for humanitarian reasons to help us by
controlling the shipments of fentanyl,” the Mexican president wrote.
It
was not immediately clear if Xi had received the letter or if he had
responded to it. López Obrador has a history of writing confrontational
letters to world leaders without getting a response.
López
Obrador has angrily denied that fentanyl is produced in Mexico.
However, his own administration has acknowledged finding dozens of labs where it is produced, mainly in the northern state of Sinaloa.
This site is devoted to all and everything associated with the notion of m-logically-valued monetary units and their applications to LETS, local exchange trading systems. Definitions of scope are broad and shall include: m-valued logic (e.g., fuzzy logic, Lukasiewicz logic); theory of monetary instruments; related quantum theoretical issues; applications technologies (hardware and software); research and development; the involved strategic planning issues; real politik of insinuating m-logically-valued exchange systems into the prevailing Newtonian institutionalization; quantum accounts of self-organization as they apply to questions of monetary theory; autopoiesis and its graphical representation systems; metaphors in theoretical biology, biometeorology, oceanography, and related sciences of multiscale dynamical systems; applicability of complexity theory to monetary systematics; history of any and all related subjects. Definitions of exclusion are narrow and shall be determined only by the propensity of any given contribution to elicit ennui.
Hypertext markup language is one very small step for mankind in the direction of employing m-valued logics. Free associations once were pristine logical accommodation schemata by virtue of animistic “identity transparency”. We are inspired by this fact and will embody that inspiration as complete disregard for conventions of binary logical thought -- though we will make no active effort in crass display of such unrespect.
Sketch of the Most Likely Scenario for Implementing a Post-Bretton Woods Global Monetary System Utilizing m-Logically-Valued Exchange Units based on Quantum Principles of Self-Organization (circa Spring 1998, Saigon)This site is devoted to all and everything associated with the notion of m-logically-valued monetary units and their applications to LETS, local exchange trading systems. Definitions of scope are broad and shall include: m-valued logic (e.g., fuzzy logic, Lukasiewicz logic); theory of monetary instruments; related quantum theoretical issues; applications technologies (hardware and software); research and development; the involved strategic planning issues; real politik of insinuating m-logically-valued exchange systems into the prevailing Newtonian institutionalization; quantum accounts of self-organization as they apply to questions of monetary theory; autopoiesis and its graphical representation systems; metaphors in theoretical biology, biometeorology, oceanography, and related sciences of multiscale dynamical systems; applicability of complexity theory to monetary systematics; history of any and all related subjects. Definitions of exclusion are narrow and shall be determined only by the propensity of any given contribution to elicit ennui.Hypertext markup language is one very small step for mankind in the direction of employing m-valued logics. Free associations once were pristine logical accommodation schemata by virtue of animistic “identity transparency”. We are inspired by this fact and will embody that inspiration as complete disregard for conventions of binary logical thought -- though we will make no active effort in crass display of such unrespect.
But
that writer, who goes by the pseudonym “streiff,” isn’t just another
political blogger. The Daily Beast has discovered that he actually works
in the public affairs shop of the very agency that Fauci leads.
William
B. Crews is, by day, a public affairs specialist for the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. But for years he has been
writing for RedState under the streiff pseudonym. And in that capacity
he has been contributing to the very same disinformation campaign that his superiors at the NIAID say is a major challenge to widespread efforts to control a pandemic that has claimed roughly 200,000 U.S. lives.
Under
his pseudonym, Crews has derided his own colleagues as part of a
left-wing anti-Trump conspiracy and vehemently criticized the man who
leads his agency, whom he described as the “attention-grubbing and
media-whoring Anthony Fauci.” He has gone after other public health
officials at the state and federal levels, as well—“the public health
Karenwaffen,'' as he’s called them—over measures such as the closures of
businesses and other public establishments and the promotion of social
distancing and mask-wearing. Those policies, Crews insists, have no
basis in science and are simply surreptitious efforts to usurp
Americans’ rights, destroy the U.S. economy, and damage President Donald
Trump’s reelection effort.
“I think we’re at the point where it
is safe to say that the entire Wuhan virus scare was nothing more or
less than a massive fraud perpetrated upon the American people by
‘experts’ who were determined to fundamentally change the way the
country lives and is organized and governed,” Crews wrote in a June post on RedState.
“If
there were justice,” he added, “we’d send and [sic] few dozen of these
fascists to the gallows and gibbet their tarred bodies in chains until
they fall apart.”
After The Daily Beast brought those and other
quotes from Crews to NIAID’s attention, the agency said in an emailed
statement that Crews would “retire”
from his position. “NIAID first learned of this matter this morning,
and Mr. Crews has informed us of his intention to retire,” the
spokesperson, Kathy Stover, wrote. “We have no further comments on this
as it is a personnel matter.”
ianwelsh | A sea change happened in the 60s and 70s: one where the legitimacy of
violence was rejected by the left, and violence was gifted to the
right. The end of the draft and the left wing hatred of all violence
meant that the left gave the military to the right wing. Cops have
always been right wing, of course, but the draft had meant that the rank
and file military included many left wingers. It also meant that people
on the left had violent skills, taught courtesy of the military.
That ended. Meanwhile the right, including the most far right,
encouraged their people to join the military and the policy, to learn
the skills and to make sure those institutions were run by right wingers
from top to bottom.
So there are two likely reasons the Michigan legislature gave into
violence. One: they think that right wing violence is legitimate. Two,
they don’t trust the police or national guard to stop right wingers they
sympathize with and support.
Meanwhile only two parts of the left believe they have a right to be
violent: Antifa, and the Black Panthers. The Black Panthers have taken
to armed escort of legislators they support.
Those who disarm; those who believe fanatically in non-violence,
always exist at the whim of those who believe in violence and are good
at it.
This is the position the left has put itself in in America and many
other countries: disarmed, bad at violence, with no influence over the
violent organs of the state and almost no tradition or skill in violence
in the few organs it still has influence over (like some unions.)
Some of this weakness was caused by the right: as with their gutting
of unions in the 80s. But much of it is because the left both believes
that violence is always wrong and that it is ineffective.
Michigan is the fruit of those beliefs.
And, children, history is a record of violence often working.
Sometimes non-violence works, yes, sometimes it even works very well.
But effective violence, especially if it is perceived as legitimate, is
also a winning strategy.
off-guardian |Joker does something that has been beyond the bounds of
acceptable Hollywood film-making for 20 years (if not more) – it holds a
mirror up to the real problems of society. It challenges the
American meme that absolutely everyone is just a day away from realising
their wildest dreams. It admits that some people truly are alone, with
no prospect of help or happiness. Ever.
The poor of this film are not Steinbeck’s “temporarily embarrassed millionaires”,
they are just poor. And will be for the rest of their lives. This film
dares to tell a secret truth – that for a lot of people, life is a
struggle. Not a “there aren’t enough black Oscar nominees” struggle, or a “this man whistled at me on my way home struggle”, or a “some guy on twitter got my pronouns wrong” struggle. An actual struggle. To survive.
The violence of this film is not the vicarious, sanitized catharsis
of a hero, nor the malign recourse of the soulless monster, a series of
disconnected incidents linked by nothing but the inhumanity of the
perpetrators. No, here, violence is a slow build to a sudden shock. Not a
disease but a symptom. A boil bursting out societal puss.
Understandable maybe, but not justifiable. Exactly the sort of subtle
position which today’s media are inoculated against.
The politics of this film are neither left or nor right. Puppets in
coloured ties don’t debate non-issues here, the world isn’t blue or red.
It is flat grey. Austerity measures kill off social programs which help
those with mental illnesses get medication, therapy and employment.
Thomas Wayne, a billionaire politician, goes on TV to berate,
belittle and insult the victims of poverty as “not trying hard enough”,
they never say which party he represents. They recognise it does not
matter.
An out of touch media class – personified by Robert De Niro’s
late-night chatshow host – punches down, mocking the victims of
society’s decline and protected, by his media bubble, from ever having
to see the way the world truly is.
In that sense, it’s a truly realistic comic book film. Joker‘s world could nearly be our own. All it takes is a little push.
Look at the months of protests in France. Look at the soaring poverty
and food-bank use here in the UK. Look at the homeless tent cities
sprouting like fields of crops around Los Angeles and San Francisco.
It IS getting crazier out there. But that’s a message the media are no longer capable of comprehending.
*
Like I said earlier, Joker is not an all-time great movie. But it is a great movie for our time.
It tells a lot of hard truths, and explores ideas that are being
bullied out of vogue by the increasingly authoritarian “liberal” class.
The Democratic Party plays an indispensable role in America's political machinery. It wields the dominant "narrative shaping" power in America in terms of controlling the state and setting policy. without the More importantly, without the existence of the Democratic Party, the US could no longer maintain the pretense that it's a "democracy."
If the Democratic Party disintegrates, the US will be revealed for what it really is -- a one-party state ruled by a narrow alliance of business interests.
Thus, the party's "narrative shaping" power is revealed as largely theatrical.
The Democratic Party doesn't exist to fight for change, but only to pose as a force which one fine distant day might possibly bestir itself to fight for change. The essential service it renders to the US power structure -- lies not in what it does, but in its mere existence: by existing, and doing nothing, it pretends to be something it's not; and this is enough to relieve despair to let the system portray itself as a "democracy."
As long as the Democratic Party exists, suggestible Americans will believe they have a "democracy" and a "choice" in how they are ruled. They will not despair, and will not revolt.
So long as they have this hope for "change from within the system."
From the system's point of view, this mechanism serves as the ultimate safety valve. The Democratic Party narrative insures that a despairing but still suggestible populace, will never coalesce into rebellion. It guarantees that no serious change to the system will be mounted. The modern Democratic Party wasn't designed to play that role..
The Democratic Party is not the "lesser evil;" it is an auxiliary subdivision of the same evil. To understand the American political system, one must step back and regard its operation as an integrated whole.
The system can't be properly understood if one's study of it begins with an uncritical acceptance of the 2-party system, and the conventional characterizations of the two parties. (Indeed, the fact that society encourages one to view it in this way, is a warning that this perspective should not be trusted.)
If one focuses on the efforts of the few outspoken dissenters, it's easy to feel that the Democratic Party is somewhat less evil than the GOP. But in the larger picture, the Democratic Party invariably submits to what its bosses promulgate and the entire range of permissible thought and public discourse shifts to the right.
The overall function of the Democratic Party is not to fight, it is to shape and to drive the ever-rightward-moving process. Just as the Harlem Globetrotters need their Washington Generals to make their basketball games properly entertaining, Republicans need the Democratic Party for effective staging of the political show.
The Democratic Party is permitted to exist because its vague hint of eventual progressive change keeps large numbers of people from bolting the political system altogether. If the Democratic Party ever actually threatened any sort of serious change, it would be disbanded. The fact that it is fully accepted by the corporations and political establishment tells us at once that its ultimate function must be wholly in line with the interests of those ruling .elites.
For the Democratic Party to even begin to serve as a vehicle for opposing the absolute rule of capital, it would at a minimum have to be capable of acknowledging the conflict that exists between the interests of capital and the rest of the people; and of expressing a principled determination to take the side of the people in this conflict.
A party whose controlling elements are billionaires, lobbyists, fund-raisers, careerist apparatchiks, consultants, and corporate lawyers; that has stood by prostrate and helpless (when not actively collaborating) in the face of stolen elections, illegal wars, torture, CIA concentration camps, lies as state policy, and one assault on the Bill of Rights after the next, is not likely to take that position.
CommonDreams | Former President Barack Obama reportedly
told advisers behind closed doors earlier this year that he would
actively oppose Sen. Bernie Sanders if the progressive senator from
Vermont opened up a big lead in the 2020 Democratic presidential primary
race.
"Publicly, [Obama] has been clear that he won't intervene in the primary for or against a candidate," Politicoreported
Tuesday. "There is one potential exception: Back when Sanders seemed
like more of a threat than he does now, Obama said privately that if
Bernie were running away with the nomination, Obama would speak up to
stop him."
Guardian | When affluent urban men in plaid flannel shirts let their hair grow
wild and unkempt across their face and necks to affect a laborer’s style
for doing laptop work in coffee shops, I think of my dad immaculately
trimming his beard every morning before dawn to work on a construction
site. The men closest to me took meticulous care with their appearance
whenever they had the chance.
Mom, too, presented herself like her main job was to be photographed,
when it was more likely to sort the inventory in the stockroom of a
retail store. Her outfits were ensembles cobbled together from Wichita
mall sale racks, but she always managed to look stylish. My favorite was
a champagne-colored silk pantsuit that was cut loose and baggy. She
wore it with a scarf that had big, lush roses on it like the satiny
wallpaper she had glued and smoothed across our hallway. She had married
a farm boy but had no interest in plaid shirts.
For me, country was not a look, a style, or even a conscious
attitude, but a physical place, its experience defined by distance from
the forces of culture that would commodify it. That place meant long
stretches of near-solitude broken up by long drives on highways to enter
society and then exit again.
Owning a small bit of the countryside brought my father deep
satisfaction. The state had seized some of his dad’s farmland through
eminent domain in the 1960s to dig the reservoir and move water east in
underground tunnels for the people of Wichita. Sometimes Dad would park
his truck on the shoulder of the two-lane blacktop that ran along the
lake dam and take my brother and me up the long, steep concrete steps to
look at what would have been his and then our small inheritance, now
literally underwater. We couldn’t use the water ourselves; it was for
Wichitans to access by turning on a faucet. We thus had dug a private
well right next to a giant reservoir on what once was our land. It’s an
old story: pushing poor rural communities out of the way to tap natural
resources for cities.
Witnessing this as a child had affected Dad deeply, and he shared
Grandpa’s attitude toward the value of land: “They don’t make any more
of it.” He had plans to buy the bit of land north of the house and build
an addition when my brother and I were older and needed more room.
Mom was less sure of these plans.
Some evenings, I’d watch her curl and tease her dark hair at the
vanity mirror that my dad had built next to their master-suite bathroom.
She smelled of hair spray and Calvin Klein Obsession perfume. She left
in the darkness and turned her car wheels from our dirt road on to the
highway for Wichita.
When Mom went to a George Strait concert at the small Cowboy Club in
Wichita, when Strait was newly famous, Dad sat at the stereo next to our
brick fireplace, listening to a radio broadcast of the show on a
country station. George would pick a woman from the audience to join him
on stage, the man on the radio said. Dad held his breath, worried that
Mom would be picked and swept away by a handsome celebrity in tight
Wranglers and a cowboy hat. The men I knew more often wore ball caps
stained through by the salt of their foreheads.
Dad didn’t even like country music. Too sad, he said.
In college, I began to understand the depth of the
rift that is economic inequality. Roughly speaking, on one side of the
rift was the place I was from – laborers, workers, people filled with
distrust for the systems that had been ignoring and even spurning them
for a couple decades. On the other side were the people who run those
systems – basically, people with college funds who end up living in
cities or moving to one of the expensive coasts. It’s much messier than
that, of course. But before arriving on campus, I hadn’t understood the
extent of my family’s poverty – “wealth” previously having been
represented to me by a friend whose dad was our small town’s postmaster
and whose mom went to the Wichita mall every weekend.
Even at a midwestern state university, my background – agricultural
work, manual labor, rural poverty, teen pregnancies, domestic chaos,
pervasive addiction – seemed like a faraway story to the people I met.
Most of them were from tidy neighborhoods in Wichita, Kansas
City, the greater Chicago area. They used a different sort of English
and had different politics. They were appalled that I had grown up with
conservative ideas about government and Catholic doctrine against
abortion. I was appalled that they didn’t know where their food came
from or even seem to care since it had always just appeared on their
plates when they wanted it.
There was no language for whatever I represented on campus.
Scholarships and student organizations existed to boost kids from
disadvantaged groups such as racial minorities, international students
and the LGBTQ community. I was none of those things, and professors and
other students often assumed from looking at me or hearing me speak that
I was a middle-class kid with parents sending me money.
rte | Pope Francis has said he will not respond to accusations by a former
top Vatican official that the Pontiff had covered up sexual abuse,
saying that the document containing the allegations "speaks for itself".
The Pope told reporters he had read the document but that he "will not say a single word on this".
He said: "I must tell you sincerely that, I must say this, to you and
all those who are interested, read the statement carefully and make
your own judgement."
He added: "I believe the statement speaks for itself. And you have
the journalistic capacity to draw your conclusions. It's an act of
faith. When some time passes and you have drawn your conclusions, I may
speak."
Without going into specifics, the Pope also said: "I would like your
professional maturity to do the work for you. It will be good for you."
In a wide-ranging news conference on board the Aer Lingus flight,
Pope Francis addressed issues ranging from clerical abuse to
homosexuality and migration.
strategic-culture |For
a man who is assailed and accused of lacking judgment even more than US
President Donald Trump, it's amazing how often British Labour Party
leader Jeremy Corbyn has already been proven courageously and
presciently right.
In
1990, Corbyn opposed the most powerful and successful peace time prime
minster of the 20th century, Margaret Thatcher when she tried to impose a
so-called poll tax on the population of the UK. His judgment was
vindicated: Thatcher’s own party rose up and threw her out of office.
At the beginning of the 21st century
Corbyn was pilloried throughout the UK media for his outspoken
opposition to Prime Minister Tony Blair’s support for the US invasions
of both Afghanistan and Iraq. Blair was prime minister for a full decade
and won three landslide general elections, yet today he is discredited
and politically virtually a recluse. Corbyn‘s opposition to both wars
looks wise, as well as principled and courageous.
Corbyn’s
support for the revolutionary Irish Republican movement was so strong
that the UK security service MI5 monitored him for two decades listing
him as a potential “subversive” who might undermine parliamentary
democracy. On the contrary, in the late 1990s, Prime Minister Blair
engaged the Irish Republican Army and its political wing Sinn Fein in a
peace process that has led to a lasting peace in Ireland. Corbyn, who
supported strongly the 1998 Good Friday Agreement proved once again to
be ahead of his time.
Corbyn
has never been afraid of taking ferociously unpopular positions. In
2015, after shocking Islamic State terror attacks in Paris he advocated
the urgent need for a political settlement to end the Syrian Civil War.
His advice was ignored by every major Western government. Hundreds of
thousands of people have been killed and millions more turned into
destitute refugees flooding into the European Union since then.
Corbyn
was also ahead of his time in seeking to engage Iran constructively. He
hosted a call-in show on an Iranian TV channel for three years from
2009 to 2012 even though he knew that at the time such activities would
seem to rule him out from ever being a serious contender to lead the
Labour Party. But in 2015, the Conservative government of the UK, along
with those of the United States, France and Germany joined in signing a
far reaching nuclear agreement with Tehran.
Corbyn’s
economic positions have long been despised by the Western liberal
intellectual elites who have been spared the price of having their
livelihoods destroyed by such policies. He strongly advocates using the
power of government to encourage the rebuilding of major national
industries and manufacturing power. These views are hardly radical,
Robert Skidelsky, one of the most influential UK economists of the past
generation has given significant support to Corbyn’s proposal of a
National Investment Bank. These policies are neither Marxist nor
revolutionary. But they can certainly be described as Social Democratic
and humane.
wsws | The Oxford Union has finally responded to the exposure of its
attempts to censor one of its own panel discussions, “Whistleblowing:
Exposing injustices or undermining institutions?” held on February 27.
The response came in the form of an article in Oxford University’s student newspaper, Cherwell,
June 7 under the headline “Union denies censoring whistleblowing panel video.” In it, the Oxford Union’s society bursar Lindsey Warne and
current president Gui Cavalcanti use evasions and lies against one of
the panel members, human rights activist Heather Marsh.
As the World Socialist Web Site has explained, “Records of
the event, including transcripts and videos, have been withheld from
publication.” The only plausible reason for this was to suppress Marsh’s
devastating criticism of one of her co-panelists—former US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) operative David Shedd.
For more than three months Oxford Union have kept silent on why the
event was not reported. This is despite repeated requests by Marsh,
asking when the video of the panel would be uploaded and why this was
not being done.
The International Youth and Students for Social Equality (IYSSE) has
made its own attempts to establish on whose authority and on what
grounds the panel was censored but has been ignored.
Only after Marsh visited Oxford Union in person in April did she
receive a response. Marsh states that Warne informed her that Shedd had
pressured for the video to be withheld—something Warne now claims she
never said.
vogue | But Ocasio-Cortez’s challenge goes far beyond surface level;
Ocasio-Cortez is a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, a
leftist organization that has helped buoy the campaigns of dozens of
outsider candidates running on very progressive platforms in places
where Democrats like Crowley are used to winning—handily. Some of
Ocasio-Cortez’s positions include fighting for Medicare for All and a federal jobs guarantee,
abolishing ICE, and insisting on much more severe policing of luxury
real estate development (part of the reason she has refused corporate
donations). Her push on economic justice has exposed ways that Crowley,
as a powerful Democrat who sits on the House Committee on Ways and
Means, pays lip service to the post–Donald Trump resistance while
maintaining largely centrist politics. Newcomers like Ocasio-Cortez and Cynthia Nixon,
who is hoping to unseat Governor Andrew Cuomo (Nixon and Ocasio-Cortez
have endorsed each other), have already helped spur a leftward shift in
some of the stances of their opponents.
Ocasio-Cortez spoke to Vogue on the phone last week before heading to a child detention center in Tornillo, Texas. Trump’s family separation policy
has been a flash point not just along partisan lines, but also between
Democrats: those who denounce ICE’s action but refuse to call for its
dismantling, like Crowley, and those who believe it should not exist.
It’s an issue that has also created a debate around “civility,” as pundits squabble over whether or not Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, for example, should have been heckled out of a Mexican restaurant last week.
As the people’s millennial challenger, Ocasio-Cortez weighed in on what
needs to change in New York, in elections, and in how we talk about
holding those in power accountable.
thesaker |The Saker: Now, turning to your books on Rabbinical
Phariseism, could you please summarize the main theses of your books on
this topic? What is, in your opinion, the true nature of Rabbinical
Phariseism, what are its core tenets/beliefs? What would you say to an
average person are the myths and realities about what is referred to as
“Judaism” in our society?
Hoffman: Orthodox Judaism, which is the scion of the
religion of the ancient Pharisees, is above all, self-worship, and
pride is the paramount destroyer. In the occult scheme of things, the
ideology closest to it was Hitler’s National Socialism, in that it
shares this predominant characteristic of pathological narcissism.
Christians and many other goyim (gentiles) have been deluded
into imagining that Judaism, while being somewhat flawed due to
rejecting Jesus, nonetheless manages to be an ethical religion
reflective of the prophets of the Old Testament. Hillel, the first
century A.D. Pharisee who is believed to have been a contemporary of
Jesus, and Moses Maimonides (“Rambam”), the medieval philosopher and
theologian, are most often held up as exemplars of this supposed ethical
Judaism.
The myth of the benevolence of these two can only be sustained by
ignorance. The problem is, that when a scholar begins to unearth facts
that undermine pious media legends about men like Hillel and Maimonides,
they enter “anti-Semitism” territory: if they dare to retail the truth,
their ability to earn a living and keep their good name and reputation
will be damaged, sometimes irreparably by the myth-makers who have the
power to permanently stigmatize them as “haters and anti-Semites.”
I’m beyond those fears, so I can venture to say that Hillel offered
theological grounds for the molestation of children and invented a “prozbul”
escape clause for evading the Biblical command that no loan shall be in
force more than seven years. Maimonides detested Jesus Christ with a
volcanic hatred that led him in his writings to urge the murder of
Christians when it is possible to do so without being detected. These
facts are documented in my books Judaism Discovered and Judaism’s Strange Gods.
Meanwhile, if you google “Hillel” or “Maimonides,” or you consult
Wikipedia, you’ll find them described in terms of saccharine sainthood
and humanitarian benevolence.
Orthodox Judaism, I regret to say, is a religion of lying and deceit.
Duplicity and mendacity are formally inculcated. They are not
incidental. There isn’t even a great deal of trust among Talmudists
themselves. Witness what Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, one time head of the
reconstituted Sanhedrin in Tiberias, and premier translator of the
Babylonian Talmud, has pronounced on this matter: “Rabbis are liable to
alter their words, and the accuracy of their statements is not to be
relied upon.” (The Talmud: The Steinsaltz Edition [Random
House], Vol. II, pp. 48-49). In BT Yevamot 65b permission is given to
lie “in the interests of peace,” a category so broad it is capable of
serving as an alibi for countless situations in which scoundrels wish to
conjure excuses for their falsehoods. There is also the general
permission to lie to a gentile (BT Baba Kamma 113a).
These facts are not published in major media such as the New York Times. Yet the Times
does not shy from insinuating that Shiite Islam is a religion of liars:
“…there is a precedent for lying to protect the Shiite community…part
of a Shiite historical concept called taqiyya, or religious dissembling.” (New York Times, April 14, 2012, p. A4).
Another defining theological aspect of Orthodox Judaism is its dogma that non-Jews are less than human. This is how the goyim
are viewed in the Talmud and its sacred successor texts. In certain
branches of Kabbalistic Judaism, such as the politically powerful and
prominent Chabad-Lubavitch sect, their founder, Rabbi Shneur Zalman,
formally promulgated the doctrine that goyim are not just less than human, they are non-human trash — “supernal refuse” — which is a reference to their Kabbalistic status as kelipot who possess “no redeeming qualities whatsoever.”
The Saker: My personal research has brought me to
the conclusion ever since the recognition by Christ as the Messiah
promised by the prophets of the Old Testament by one part of the first
century Jews and the rejection of Him by the other part, the latter
group began by developing an “anti-Christian scriptural toolkit” which
included, of course, the forgery of the so-called Masoretic text, the
development of the Talmud and the various commentaries, interpretations
and codification of these texts. The goal was to develop a “polemical
arsenal” so to speak. At the same time, the first kabbalistic concepts
were developed for the internal use inside
the anti-Christian communities. Would you agree with this (admittedly
summarized) description and would you then agree with my personal
conclusion that Rabbinical Phariseeism is at its core simply a religion
of “anti-Christianity”?
Hoffman: I think you’re correct up to the
Renaissance, which is the point at which members of the Roman Catholic
hierarchy including many popes, were secretly initiated into Kabbalistic
mysticism. The belt of that transmission is chronicled in detail in The Occult Renaissance Church of Rome.
Rabbinic Phariseeism is more than a religion opposed to Jesus for this
reason: in its beginnings in the time before Christ, it had existence as
a creed founded upon esoteric oral teachings that nullify the Bible
itself.
Orthodox Judaism is an anti-Biblical religion. Yes, it has a “Moses”
and a “Noah” as its patrons and it names other patriarchs too, but these
are not the Moses and Noah of the Bible. These are radically falsified
figures who bear those names. Pharisac Judaism is contemptuous of the
Biblical Noah about whom, in the Midrash, it makes scurrilous
claims. There is even contempt for Moses. About Isaiah, who said that
Israel has filthy lips, the Talmud teaches that Isaiah was justly killed
by having his mouth sawed in half for “blaspheming Israel.”
In both Left-wing New Age and Right-wing neo-Nazi circles, the heresy
of Marcion is alive and well and the Old Testament is execrated. It is
equated with the Talmud (most famously on the Right by Douglas Reed in The Controversy of Zion).
The problem with that tack is that the Old Testament is absolutely not a
book of self-worship of the Jews. It is radically different from the
Babylonian Talmud. The Bible is an antidote to self-worship. The Old
Testament excoriates Israelites in the strongest possible terms.
nakedcapitalism | The results also support our hypothesis about the Starbucks incident,
in which a now-fired manager called the cops on two men whose crime
appeared to be waiting at a Starbucks while black, and using the
restroom. The evidence below indicates this manager was a disaster
waiting to happen and had been calling the police at a vastly higher
frequency than her predecessor.
We had discussed briefly that one Malcolm Gladwell’s books included a
case study of biased policing in the Los Angeles Police Department,
which has a a terrible record in that regard. He found was that a very
few cops were responsible for virtually all the incidents. Gladwell
argued that that meant the conventional approach, of more training for
all the police, was all wet. Those rogue policemen needed to be taken
off the street.
Starbuck’s rush to hold a training program may be good optics, but it
isn’t likely to be the best approach. The coffee chain should require
managers to write an incident report any time they call the police. That
would enable them to see if any managers were making a lot of requests
and they could then look as to whether the calls were warranted or not.
News reports have pointed out that part of the problem is that
Starbucks never gave its store managers any policy on what to do about
people who stay in a Starbucks without buying anything. I’m skeptical
that promulgating rules on a national basis is the right answer. As I
mentioned when I had nearly a week of having to work in Starbucks thanks
to Verizon-induced connectivity woes, there was often one or two
homeless people in an area that was a bit removed from the cash
registers.
There were also plenty of customers back there, most working
solo like me, but also a few groups of two or three people chatting. No
one was bothered by the homeless people sitting nearby. In fact, I
thought it was a good thing that some of the money I spent at Starbucks
was helping the homeless. However, it isn’t hard to think that in an
affluent suburb, the locals would go nuts if a homeless person were to
hang out in a Starbucks, and management would almost be forced to run
them off because customers were certain to make a stink.
democracynow | Look, Amy, in slaves-owning societies or in the Middle Ages, we had
production. People worked, toiled the land. Then we had distribution.
The lord would send his henchmen in, his sheriff, to take his cut. So
you had distribution—production, distribution. The lord’s cut would then
be sold in markets. He would get money out of it, and then you would
have finance. So we had production, distribution, finance.
With capitalism, we had the reversal of that. First you’d get the
debt, to set up the—you know, to employ people. So you have finance,
then distribution, and the last thing that happens is production. So,
debt is central to capitalism. Now, that means one thing: The banker,
the financier, has an exorbitant privilege. He’s like the sorcerer who
has the capacity to push his hand through the time line, snatch value
from the future, that has not been produced yet, and bring it in to the
present to help orchestrate the production that will create the value
that will be repaid in the future. But, effectively, you’re creating a
class of people, the financiers, who then have complete control over
society. And they can keep doing this a lot more, until the present can
no longer repay the future, and there is a huge crash. And then what
happens? Because they have this privileged position, they can make you
and me, President Obama, whoever, Larry Summers, bail them out. So, they
win if their bets succeed, and they win if their bets lose. What kind
of political economy is this, when you have one class of people who win,
whatever they do, and everybody else loses, whatever they do?
AMYGOODMAN: Is this what you refer to the black magic of banking?
YANISVAROUFAKIS: That’s exactly right.
AMYGOODMAN: And so, what’s the cure for this?
YANISVAROUFAKIS: Well, the cure of this is, effectively, to do that which FDR did in the 1930s.
AMYGOODMAN: President Roosevelt.
YANISVAROUFAKIS:
President Roosevelt—to put the financial genie back in the bottle. Make
banking boring again. Put huge constraints upon them. Nationalize the
banks and turn them into institutions for public purpose. And if
even—you don’t necessarily need to nationalize, as long as you really
keep them under strict control. Remember Bretton Woods, which designed
the golden era of capitalism. Bretton Woods was a conference in 1944,
and there 120 different countries agreed on the system which saw, in the
1950s and 1960s, the longest period of steady growth, with shrinking
inequality and low unemployment and low inflation. FDR
had one condition slapped onto membership of that Bretton Woods
Conference. Do you know what it was? No banker was allowed in the
Washington—the Mount Washington Hotel. So you had a monetary and
financial system that was designed in the absence of bankers. That’s
what we should do again.
AMYGOODMAN: What is apolitical money?
YANISVAROUFAKIS:
In this country, you have a lot of people, good people, who are fed up
with politicians, who are fed up with the Fed, and who believe that—they
believe in true money, in honest money, that money should be somehow
independent of the political process. Remember the gold standard? They
still hanker after the gold standard. They would like the quantity of
dollars printed to be linked to the quantity of gold that the Fed owns,
so that there would be no political influence of the quantity of money,
because they fear that—they fear the government will print too much
money, and there will be inflation, and the value of money will be
effectively eaten away—the gold bugs, as you call them in this country.
Bitcoin—Bitcoin is a digital form of the gold standard. And so, the
backlash against political control—
AMYGOODMAN: The Bitcoin folks are moving into Puerto Rico right now, has been devastated by Maria.
YANISVAROUFAKIS: Of course it’s been devastated. But the solution is not Bitcoin.
AMYGOODMAN: But they’re moving in fast.
YANISVAROUFAKIS:
Yes, but it’s—you know, it’s just a bubble. It will burst. And the
reason is, however much we loathe the political process because it is
controlled by oligarchs and by the same old financiers who are behind
the politicians who are bailing them out whenever the finance is
needed—however much we dislike that, there is no alternative to
political money. Why? Because the quantity of money must be in sync with
the quantity of output of goods and services. If those two go out of
sync, you have deflationary bouts. You have to—that will lead to
depression. So, to put it very bluntly and simply, the quantity of money
must be decided democratically. At the moment, it’s not being decided
democratically. It’s decided politically, but oligarchically. The
solution is not to take it and tie it to some algorithm.
AMYGOODMAN:
In the United States, you—in the United States, you only refer to
oligarchy when you’re talking about Russia, the oligarchs. But
billionaire businessmen in the United States, you do not refer to as
oligarchs.
YANISVAROUFAKIS:
But the United States of America is the prime oligarchy. The difference
between the United States of America and Russia is that the United
States is a more successful oligarchy. But it is an oligarchy
nevertheless.
AMYGOODMAN: Explain.
YANISVAROUFAKIS:
Well, think of 2008. President Obama is sworn in on a wave of
expectation by the victims of the financiers. And what does he do? First
thing he does is he appoints Larry Summers and Tim Geithner, the very
same people who had actually unshackled the financiers in the late
1990s, allowing them to do everything that brought so much discontent to
the very same people who then entrusted President Obama. President
Obama, very soon after that, lost his credibility with those people, and
the result is Donald Trump. That’s an oligarchy.
AMYGOODMAN:
And so, why is Donald Trump so fiercely opposed to President Obama—is
it just racial?—given that he laid the groundwork for the oligarchs, for
people like Donald Trump, if, in fact, he does have money?
YANISVAROUFAKIS:
Well, the ruling class has a fantastic capacity, like the working
class, to be divided. Donald Trump was never in the pocket of Wall
Street. He used Wall Street. He used Deutsche Bank. He used all the
people he dislikes, in order to keep, effectively, bankrupting his
companies and profiting from it. So he’s really very good at that. But
he was never very successful as a businessman, certainly not as
successful as Goldman Sachs or JPMorgan. And he was always on the
margins of the capitalist order of things in the United States. He
understood that in order for him to gain more power, more—both
discursively and politically and economically, he had to ride the wave
of discontent against Obama. And he did this magnificently. And the
Democrats let him. The Democrats brought their own distress and failure
upon themselves.
AMYGOODMAN:
So I want to talk about the rise of the right, but go back to World War
II—actually, between World War I and World War II in Germany. How do
you see the growth of the support for Hitler and how he took power in
Germany, going back to World War I and the devastation of Germany?
YANISVAROUFAKIS:
The combination—the combination of a humiliated populace. The
humiliation is very important, Amy. When you humiliate a whole people in
the middle of a great depression, great economic crisis, you have a
political crisis. So the political center implodes, which is what
happened with the Weimar Republic, and then all sorts of political
monsters ride up—rise up from that. We saw this in the 1920s, the 1930s,
in the midwar period in Germany. But we saw it in—we see it in Greece
today, after—do you know we have a Nazi party in Greek Parliament—in the
country that, along with Yugoslavia, fought tooth and nail against
Nazism in the 1940s. We had a magnificent resistance movement against
Nazism. In that country now, the third-largest party is a—not a neo-Nazi
party, fully old-fashioned Nazi party.
AMYGOODMAN: And this came into the Parliament when?
YANISVAROUFAKIS:
They came into Parliament in 2012, at the time of a humiliated public
in the clasp of a great depression, just like in Germany in the 1930s.
But allow me to make a point, because there is a great
misunderstanding about Germany of the midwar period. Usually people say,
“Oh, it was hyperinflation. It was the fact that prices were rising
exponentially that brought Hitler to power.” Not true. It is true that
hyperinflation depleted the middle class, effectively destroyed the
middle class’s savings and shook the system and made the Weimar Republic
extremely fragile and ready for the taking. But if you look at the
electoral performance of the Nazi Party in Germany, there is a direct
correlation, not with inflation, but with deflation. You had Chancellor
Brüning, who in 1930 decided to slam the brakes on the economy and to
use large doses of austerity in order to make inflation go away—a bit
like Paul Volcker when he pushed interest rates up in the early '80s,
remember, to 20-something percent—and a lot more fiscal austerity, not
just monetary austerity. It was at that point when prices started
falling in Germany. Prices started falling, and unemployment ballooned.
And that is when you have a major jump in the support for Nazis.
Deflation breeds fascism. And that is something that we've got to
remember. And I’m making this point because, unfortunately, the European
Union’s economic policies today are producing deflationary forces that
are being exported to the United States and to China. And that does not
augur well for progressive international politics.
AMYGOODMAN:
So talk now about the far right in Europe and also in the United
States. But in Europe, you’re talking about Poland, you’re talking about
Hungary. You’ve got Golden Dawn, not to mention the Nazi party, in
Greece.
YANISVAROUFAKIS: Oh, that’s the Golden—the Golden Dawn is a Nazi party. That’s the Nazi party I was referring to.
medium | Don’t
catch me slipping. There’s always a way to make Black people’s
suffering seem like our own fault, no matter how targeted or deliberate
the attacks against us are. If you get got, it’s because you and your
people got caught slipping. There’s a reason headlines make it seem like
cops’ bullets fire themselves. Even their guns get the benefit of the
doubt; Black people shot full of holes don’t.
The
narrative that Black America is solely responsible for all the violence
it suffers is centuries-old and extremely resilient. This is where
Kanye West’s statements about slavery being a choice find their roots.
It’s more palatable to blame the victims than force the perpetrators to
take a posture of forgiveness, and this upside-down world is what Black
Americans have to negotiate without losing their minds. As he dances
through the frame, Glover goes from grimacing to grinning in split
seconds, from brutal violence to almost shucking and jiving. He
skillfully navigates the madness and chaos unfolding behind him. At the
end, he’s sweaty, wide-eyed, and running for his life.
This is
America, where Blackness is pathologized and capitalism warps ghastly
incentives even further. Black people in America have been selected
to be the lowest rung, the exploited class upon which the nation’s
wealth is built. It’s no accident that Black entertainment has become
one of the primary vehicles for masking this reality. There’s a reason
the gaudy exhibitions of “new Black money” are reliably programmed.
When
the choir raises their voices to sing, “Grandma told me, ‘Get your
money, Black man!’” I can’t tell if it’s a cry for reparations or a call
to dive headfirst into the rapacious, winner-take-all capitalism of
America’s streets and boardrooms. And while I’m not convinced that this
uncertainty isn’t deliberate (a slippery way of not alienating anyone),
that tension is at the heart of the truth Glover is telling. Survival
demands that Black people participate in an immoral, capitalist system
that brutalizes them, and justice demands the wealth built on the backs
of our stolen ancestors be returned to us. We try to achieve both and
end up accomplishing neither.
dailymail | White South African farmers will be removed from their land after a landslide vote in parliament.
The
country's constitution is now likely to be amended to allow for the
confiscation of white-owned land without compensation, following a
motion brought by radical Marxist opposition leader Julius Malema.
It
passed by 241 votes for to 83 against after a vote on Tuesday, and the
policy was a key factor in new president Cyril Ramaphosa's platform
after he took over from Jacob Zuma in February.
Mr Malema said the time for 'reconciliation is over'. 'Now is the time for justice,' News24 reported.
'We must ensure that we restore the dignity of our people without compensating the criminals who stole our land.'
Mr Malema has a long-standing commitment
to land confiscation without compensation. In 2016 he told his
supporters he was 'not calling for the slaughter of white people - at
least for now'.
A 2017 South African government audit found white people owned 72 per cent of farmland.
Rural
affairs minister for the ruling African National Congress party said
'The ANC unequivocally supports the principle of land expropriation
without compensation'.
'There is no doubt about it, land shall be expropriated without compensation.'
Freedom
Front Plus party leader Pieter Groenewald said the decision to strip
white farmers of their land would cause 'unforeseen consequences that is
not in the interest of South Africa'.
The
deputy chief executive of civil rights group Afriforum said the motion
was a violation of agreements made at the end of apartheid. Fist tap Big Don.
Noah called the feud between Trump and Warren a “tricky one to
process” because his nicknames for other people like “Low-Energy” Jeb Bush, “Little” Marco Rubio, and “Lyin'” Ted Cruz are more self-explanatory than “Pocahontas.”
“When he says ‘Pocahontas,’ you might be thinking, ‘Trevor, I’m confused. Is Elizabeth Warren Native American?'” Noah asked. “And you see, that’s the question. Because for a long time, she said she was.”
He then played numerous news clips that explain that without any
proof, Warren claimed to have Native American heritage and that minority
status helped her get a job at Harvard University, which they touted
their “diversity” with her employment.
“Wow,” Noah reacted. “How white is your college that when you get
called out for being too white, your response is, ‘Nuh-uh, we’ve got
her!'”
He then mocked her recipe contributions to a 1984 Native American cookbook called Pow Wow Chow and
pointed out that the New England Genealogical Society found “no proof”
that Warren had Native American lineage, which Noah called “problematic”
because she wrote for Pow Wow Chow.
“I mean, that would be like finding out I’m completely white, I have no African blood, and yet I wrote the book Snacks For Blacks,” Noah quipped.
Noah concluded that while Trump “is racist,” but he’s hitting Warren
for saying she’s Native American when she wasn’t, something he noted she
“never apologized for or owned up to.”
“Elizabeth Warren did something problematic, the kind of thing we
rightfully call each other out for every single day,” Noah continued.
“So as weird as it is to say, in his own racially offensive way, Donald
Trump was being woke. Yeah, and that’s unfortunately the truth.”
theintercept |CIA Director Mike
Pompeo met late last month with a former U.S. intelligence official who
has become an advocate for a disputed theory that the theft of the
Democratic National Committee’s emails during the 2016 presidential
campaign was an inside job, rather than a hack by Russian intelligence.
Pompeo met on October 24 with William Binney, a former National Security Agency official-turned-whistleblower who co-authored an analysis
published by a group of former intelligence officials that challenges
the U.S. intelligence community’s official assessment that Russian
intelligence was behind last year’s theft of data from DNC computers.
Binney and the other former officials argue that the DNC data was
“leaked,” not hacked, “by a person with physical access” to the DNC’s
computer system.
In an interview with The Intercept, Binney said Pompeo told him that
President Donald Trump had urged the CIA director to meet with Binney to
discuss his assessment that the DNC data theft was an inside job.
During their hour-long meeting at CIA headquarters, Pompeo said Trump
told him that if Pompeo “want[ed] to know the facts, he should talk to
me,” Binney said.
A senior intelligence source confirmed that Pompeo met with Binney to
discuss his analysis, and that the CIA director held the meeting at
Trump’s urging. The Intercept’s account of the meeting is based on
interviews with Binney, the senior intelligence source, a colleague who
accompanied Binney to CIA headquarters, and others who Binney told about
the meeting. A CIA spokesperson declined to comment. “As a general
matter, we do not comment on the Director’s schedule,” said Dean Boyd,
director of the CIA’s Office of Public Affairs.
Binney said that Pompeo asked whether he would be willing to meet
with NSA and FBI officials to further discuss his analysis of the DNC
data theft. Binney agreed and said Pompeo said he would contact him when
he had arranged the meetings.
It is highly unorthodox for the CIA director to reach out to someone
like Binney, a 74-year-old ex-government employee who rose to prominence
as an NSA whistleblower wrongfully persecuted by the government, for
help with fact-finding related to the theft of the DNC emails. It is
particularly stunning that Pompeo would meet with Binney at Trump’s
apparent urging, in what could be seen as an effort to discredit the
U.S. intelligence community’s own assessment that an alleged Russian
hack of the DNC servers was part of an effort to help Trump win the
presidency.
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