Wednesday, 5 April 2023
CRINGE PIC OF THE MONTH
Tuesday, 4 April 2023
TIP OF THE HAT: PEACE MAN
JUST THOUGHT I would post a link to a helpful and heart-felt video post by the economist Jeffrey Sachs who does so much work around the world promoting peace and combating climate change. BOTH are issues he speaks passionately and eloquently on. In this short video, here, Jeffrey reviews the history of the U.S. proxy war in Ukraine against Russia and gives us important historical facts that provide context for the conflict. ONE THING that I was not aware of, and that Jeffery mentions in his talk, is the fact that the former president of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovych (2010-2014) favoured neutrality for his country. In Yanukovych’s vision, Ukraine would not join NATO and would instead become “a sovereign state which refrains from joining either side of the conflict and adheres to the principle of the Law of Neutrality under international law.” (Wikipedia) And he had several models of state neutrality close at hand with Sweden, Finland*, Austria, and Switzerland from which to choose.
Neutrality was (and is) a key demand for Russia in any peace treaty it ultimately makes with Kiev. Yanukovych’s stance on neutrality in 2013 and his desire for a more balanced and friendly relationship with Russia had become unacceptable to Washington, which set about orchestrating a coup d’état later that year, the so-called “Revolution of Dignity” (also known as the "Maidan Revolution"), ousting him from office and forcing him to flee to Russia in February, 2014. The coup was manufactured by the CIA, NGOs, and hardline nativist elements inside Ukraine. It was overseen by Russiaphobe par excellence Victoria Nuland, then the
(And saints preserve us! This ghoul is still around in her new job as undersecretary of state for political affairs. And she’s still meddling—dangerously so—in Ukraine today!)
p.s. It should be highlighted on every government job advert: SOCIOPATHS NEED NOT APPLY.
Cheers, Jake
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* Of course, both Sweden and Finland, under pressure from the United States, have asked for NATO membership and may very well join the ‘defensive’ alliance in the near future. This would be a dangerous turn of events, and a needlessly provocative action. (Russia's security concerns have been ignored for years, as Jeffery emphasizes in his speech, and still the collective West/United States, insists on bringing NATO even closer to Russian borders. Two nuclear superpowers eyeball to eyeball, on the cusp of a hot war. What could possibly go wrong? How long will this continue before someone does something incredibly dangerous? Truly, this is the "Age of Stupid".
RANT: YCMTSU!
NO
CLEARER EXAMPLE of this is the now-infamous “Hunter
Biden lapdance top” imbroglio, with
all its sordid pornography, but also containing evidence of wrongdoing on the
part of Hunter and his father (the President), evidence that is perhaps
not proof of guilt in a court of law, but may very well be in the court of public
opinion.
TWITTER locked out the New York Post’s Twitter account three weeks before the Presidential elections in November of 2020. The Post could not publish any information it had about the laptop on Twitter, nor link up with any other Twitter accounts. IN A TIME when the digital public square has almost entirely supplanted the brick and mortar one, it should come as no surprise that whoever has the job of ‘gatekeeper’ bears what should be a solemn responsibility to ensure that everyone has access, and that the platform be a place where opinions are freely exchanged, and debates contested honestly and openly. However, this goal is not often present enough at Twitter or at most social media platforms in business today.
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"Ummm! Google!" |
WOULD having a freely-functioning 'Twitter-verse' have tipped the elections scales to favour Donald Trump over Joe Biden in 2020? We’ll never know, but in an ideal world, partisanship of this nature would not be part of the ‘DNA’ in any social media platform. If promoting free and public discourse is not uppermost in the minds of the people who are running these digital platforms if, instead, they take upon themselves the role of a publisher of news and commentary, then they should have to abide by the legal restrictions of a publisher. You can’t say you’re a neutral platform for the dissemination of news and information, and at the same time act as a publisher—i.e., editing and curating (or censoring)the content you offer. Try as you will, you can’t suck and blow at the same time. [And we’ve all been down that road before! Ed.]
THE HUNTER BIDEN LAPTOP SAGA is but one exposed and egregious example of what may be an incurable disease, endemic throughout today’s social media organizations, at least as they’re currently configured. Mysterious algorithms, hidden data-harvesting, back-channel DMs with spooks and power brokers are ultimately trust-breakers for people struggling to discover factual news and be privy to honest, engaged discussions about the truly difficult questions we all need answered, and soon. If social media companies cannot or will not provide such services, then a pox on all their houses!
HAVING SAT ACROSS A TABLE facing a panel of hostile interlocutors, I know how uncomfortable such settings can be, and I admit to cringing a bit when several of the Democratic members during the sub-committee hearings were outright hostile and derisive of Taibbi and Schellenberg, making numerous ad hominem attacks in a shameful and petty display, most juvenile in my opinion. What are these lawmakers afraid of, to act in such a manner? Uncovering biases and censorship practices within supposedly unbiased and transparent social media organizations should be in everyone's interest. Right? Or am I missing something? Is it possible there are other motivations at play for these so-called representatives of the people besides a search for truth and justice? 'Representatives', my ass! 💰 Just sayin'.
BUT, Matt and Michael kept their cool (I would have lost it; props to them!), presenting their findings and
airing their concerns around how pervasive censorship regimes are within social media organizations. And they did so despite the hostile reception their words received.
AMERICAN author James Howard Kunstler, in a recent blog post, gives his take on the congressional hearings in his usual cogent and well-honed prose:
“You get the picture? Now how about that other war: our government’s war against us? What canny reporters (Taibbi, Schellenberger) are calling the Censorship Industrial Complex has been pretty well outed. Everybody knows that the FBI, CIA, DHS, and many other agencies, via hijacked social media, have worked tirelessly to confound and bamboozle the public debate about, really, everything that matters. The odd part is that roughly half of America doesn’t seem to care. Of course, that is the same half of the country that has fallen in love with surveillance, censorship, political prosecutions, election monkey business, mandated mRNA shots, and other excursions into bad faith. Their auditors in the mainstream news media actually seem to relish their roles as enforcers of unreality.” (James Howard Kunstler)
Cheers, Jake
______________________________________________
* “An
algorithm is a mathematical set of rules
specifying how a group of data behaves. In social media, algorithms help
maintain order and assist in ranking search results and advertisements. On
Facebook, for example, there is an algorithm that directs pages and content to
display in a certain order.” (Digital Marketing Institute)
[You won't catch me any where near that fucking bird! Ed.]
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