Jeremy Corbyn: UK Prosecutor’s Office Went Too Far in Assange Case

Demonstration in solidarity with Julian Assange in London, UK, 2024.

Demonstration in solidarity with Julian Assange in London, UK, 2024. | Photo: X/ @zannafauzy

teleSUR Newsletter

The Crown Prosecution Service may have overstepped its bounds in advising the Swedish government.

On Thursday, a group of legislators called on the House of Commons Justice Committee to investigate the role of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) in Julian Assange’s extradition process.

Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, ex-Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell, Conservative David Davis, and Green Party’s Caroline Lucas argue that there are indications that the CPS may have overstepped its bounds in advising the Swedish government.

In Assange’s legal proceedings, the CPS acts as prosecutor on behalf of the requesting countries, first Sweden for a now-closed case and since 2019 on behalf of the U.S. Justice.

“Evidence has emerged that exposes the CPS to accusations of misjudgment, or possibly overreach, in its role in advising Swedish authorities on Assange’s extradition to Sweden,” said the lawmakers.

“This leads to questioning the motives behind these actions, including whether the CPS was influenced by another extradition request or aimed to facilitate Assange’s subsequent extradition to the United States,” they added.

When Sweden requested Assange’s extradition in 2010 to question him about alleged sexual offenses, his defense argued it was politically motivated persecution to eventually extradite him to the U.S., which was investigating him after WikiLeaks revealed U.S. Army human rights violations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

At that time, Assange’s team asked Sweden – represented by the Prosecution Service – to question their client on British soil or to provide assurances that, if extradited, he would not be subsequently sent to the United States. These proposals did not progress.

Lawmakers emphasize that NGOs such as Reporters Without Borders have warned that prosecuting Assange in the U.S. would endanger freedom of expression.

The 52-year-old Australian will face a decisive hearing in the final stretch of his UK process on Monday, when the High Court of London will assess assurances offered by Washington before deciding whether to authorize his extradition to the U.S. or, alternatively, to allow him to continue appealing in England.

[…]

Via https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/UK-Prosecutors-Office-Went-Too-Far-in-the-Assange-Case-Corbyn-20240516-0006.html

Perjury: The Case Against Peter Daszak

Perjury: The Case Against Peter Daszak

By

Though untruthful testimony pales in comparison to the crimes of the last five years, perjury may be the most effective charge to impose accountability on the wrongdoers behind the Covid Regime.

In the wake of World War II, American law enforcement discovered that top government officials had committed espionage on behalf of the Soviet Union. The Department of Justice was often unable to charge them as classified documents and bureaucratic secrecy risked prosecutorial dead ends.

But a 35-year-old Congressman from California devised a plan to catch the actors in the coverups of their crimes. Rep. Richard Nixon grilled State Department Official Alger Hiss on his associations with professed Soviet spies, including Whittaker Chambers. Hiss lied under oath by claiming he never met Chambers, and a jury subsequently convicted him of two counts of perjury in 1950.

Perjury, though a petty charge compared to treason, allowed prosecutors to present a clear case for a crime that requires three basic elements: (1) the declarant took an oath to testify truthfully; (2) the declarant knowingly made a false statement; and (3) the declarant’s false statement related to a material fact.

Now, Americans again face the distressing realization that leading academic, scientific, and governmental officials were guilty of deception, profiteering, and entangling foreign relationships in a global crisis. Classified documents and bureaucratic secrecy offer far greater protection than they did 75 years ago, but the case for perjury against Peter Daszak is now clear.

  1. Daszak testified under oath

Last week, the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic released a report recommending EcoHealth Alliance President Dr. Peter Daszak be “formally debarred and criminally investigated as a result of his actions prior to and during the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Daszak funneled hundreds of thousands of dollars in US taxpayer money to the Wuhan Institute of Virology to fund gain-of-function research and then spearheaded censorship efforts by secretly organizing a statement issued by the Lancet in February 2020 calling lab-leak hypotheses “conspiracy theories” that “create fear, rumours, and prejudice that jeopardise our global collaboration in the right against this virus.”

In November, Daszak testified behind closed doors for nine and a half hours. A House Report subsequently noted that his organization “continued to obstruct” ongoing investigations. On May 1, 2024, he appeared before Congress.

“Daszak’s testimony was a parade of perjury,” Dr. Richard Ebright, a molecular biologist at Rutgers University, told the New York Post. “A litany of lies. One knowing, willful, brazen and provable lie after another.”

Though Daszak tried to evade the Congressional Committee with obfuscation and non–answers, he made at least three categories of statements that subject him to perjury charges.

  1. Daszak knowingly made false statements

On Gain-of-Function Research 

Daszak insists that his groups have not engaged in gain-of-function research, but the evidence suggests he has repeatedly lied under oath.

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY) asked, “You did not fund any research that modified a virus to make it more infectious among humans?” Daszak responded immediately, “EcoHealth Alliance never has, and did not do gain of function research, by definition.”

That “definition,” well known to Daszak, is research that “improves the ability of a pathogen to cause disease,” as one 2014 US Government report explained.

Daszak’s denial is entirely inconsistent with his own words and his group’s well-documented history of government grants.

In July 2016, an NIH official informed Daszak that his requests for funding for research that would be “conducted at the Wuhan Institute of Virology” had been approved. “This is terrific!” Daszak responded to the NIH. “We are very happy to hear that our Gain of Function research funding pause has been lifted.”

Daszak’s excitement reflected EcoHealth’s history of gain-of-function research.

In 2014, NIH awarded EcoHealth a $3.7 million grant to study bat coronaviruses, which it conducted in collaboration with the Wuhan Institute of Virology. The researchers reported that their lab-altered coronaviruses reproduced far more quickly than the original virus in the lungs of genetically engineered mice.

In 2018, EcoHealth submitted a $14 million grant proposal to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) that suggested a partnership with the Wuhan Institute of Virology in which they would construct bat coronaviruses and insert “human-specific cleavage sites” as a means to “evaluate growth potential” of the pathogens. Though the request was denied, it was consistent with EcoHealth’s line of work.

In 2021, NIH admitted in a letter to Congress that EcoHealth enhanced a bat coronavirus to become more infectious to humans, and EcoHealth violated the terms of its grant by failing to report that the research increased the viral growth of the pathogen tenfold.

Daszak can plead ignorance on the meaning of gain-of-function research (he claims he does not “have a personal definition”), but there is a well-documented history demonstrating his obstinate pursuit of gain-of-function research at EcoHealth.

On Reporting Failures

Daszak and EcoHealth have admitted to failing to file timely reports on their research, which were required under the terms of their NIH grants. For example, EcoHealth did not submit its September 2019 annual report until 2021.

While this may seem like a mundane matter of bureaucratic non-compliance, the evidence suggests it was an act of deliberate deception. That progress report revealed a “limited experiment” in which EcoHealth found that laboratory mice infected with a lab-altered coronavirus became “sicker than those infected with” a naturally occurring virus. In other words, it revealed deliberate gain-of-function research.

While EcoHealth concealed the report for nearly two years, Daszak led efforts to censor and dismiss any concerns that Covid emerged from a lab.

In Congressional testimony, Daszak claimed that he did not submit the report because he was “locked out” of the NIH system and blocked from submitting it. But a forensic investigation “never found any evidence that they had been locked out of [the NIH] system.”

Circumstantial evidence further suggests that Daszak perjured himself on this point. In previous reports, Daszak directly emailed progress reports to his NIAID program officer after filing it with the NIH system. In 2018, for example, he wrote, “I just wanted to send you a pdf of our Year 4 Report.”

In 2019, however, he was conspicuously silent. Daszak and his team made no effort to contact NIAID about the annual report, nor did EcoHealth send a single request or notification to the NIH that it had been “locked out” of the online system.

All the evidence suggests that Daszak lied about concealing the report, and he had every motive to do so.

On Communications with Fauci’s Top Advisor

One lesser-known character in the Daszak testimony was Dr. David Morens, who served as a top advisor to Dr. Anthony Fauci at NIAID. In his November testimony, Daszak referred to Morens as a “mentor.”

In the past, Dr. Morens has deliberately violated government requirements by using his personal email accounts to evade transparency requests. As he wrote in one email, “I always try to communicate over gmail because my NIH email is FOIA’d constantly…I will delete anything I don’t want to see in The New York Times.”

In his Congressional testimony, Daszak admitted to working with Morens to reinstate federal funding for EcoHealth. Rep. Rich McCormick (R-GA.) asked Daszak, “Were you aware that Dr. David Morens was communicating with you on his personal Gmail account to avoid FOIA and public accountability?”

Daszak responded that these communications were just related to “personal matters.” Rep. McCormick followed up, “Personal matters about reinstating a public grant.”

Daszak argued that the conversations were about “personal and security issues” rather than “political security issues” because he only asked for “advice as a friend and colleague.” But Morens was not a colleague; he was part of the apparatus that funded Daszak’s enterprise through taxpayer money.

Daszak’s statements were not mere obfuscations; they were deliberate lies to hide the truth of his role in gain-of-function research and his relationship with the US Government.

  1. The Lies Were Material 

Daszak’s statements clearly fall under the broad legal definition of materiality. They concerned the most important questions surrounding Congressional inquiries into Covid: the origins of the virus, ongoing gain-of-function research, government corruption, and self-interested lies.

At every available opportunity, Daszak worked to deceive the public. Before the outbreak of Covid, he worked with government officials to circumvent President Obama’s gain-of-function

research moratorium. In 2019, he concealed progress reports that revealed EcoHealth’s research had violated government regulations. Months later, he secretly authored the Lancet letter denouncing the lab leak theory without revealing his conflict-of-interest of ongoing collaboration with the Wuhan of Virology.

Just last month, Daszak emailed colleagues about his interest in obstructing the Congressional investigation, writing, “Each day of delay helps.” Daszak then refused to respond to government demands for EcoHealth documents, further hindering the Government investigation. Rep. Brad Wenstrup (R-OH), Chairman of the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic, described this as evidence of his “clearly bad faith and dilatory motivations.”

That deception mutated into perjury as Daszak took an oath to testify truthfully before Congress. While the Covid regime will attempt to cloak their crimes with bureaucratic redactions and legal loopholes, perjury offers a clear means to hold wrongdoers accountable.

[…]

Via https://brownstone.org/articles/perjury-the-case-against-peter-daszak/

Dr. Peter McCullough Issues Urgent COVID Vaccine Warning to Donald Trump

The Vigilant Fox

World-renowned cardiologist Dr. Peter McCullough says that Donald Trump is missing out on the “political opportunity of a lifetime” if he doesn’t soon reverse course on the disastrous COVID-19 injections.

This declaration came during a riveting conversation on the Tommy T Podcast.

Dr. McCullough suggested that Trump doesn’t necessarily have to admit that he was wrong. Instead, he could throw Fauci and Biden under the bus because Fauci is a deceiver who has his credibility “is in the tank” and “all the safety problems in the vaccine occurred under Biden.”

Podcast host Tommy T added that Trump could save face and send shockwaves through the political landscape with a bit of messaging that sounds like this:

Join 58K+ subscribers and 920K+ 𝕏 users who follow the work of Vigilant Fox. Subscribe to Vigilant News today to get the scoop on stories you won’t see anywhere else.

Upgrade to paid

“We found out now, after further research, it [COVID vaccine] is no good. And that guy [Biden] is trying to kill you and your kids.” “If he said that, whoa!” Tommy T exclaimed.

Such a move would give Trump:

• Another massive talking point against Biden.

• Votes that would otherwise swing in the favor of Robert Kennedy Jr.

• An opportunity to be the hero that gave the vaccine issue the momentum it needs, making it a crime that can no longer be denied.

Remember, all the vaccine safety problems emerged while Biden was in office. Trump could argue that Biden’s oversight of vaccine safety was a complete disaster. Plus, Biden is the one who demonized the unvaccinated and enacted sweeping vaccine mandates, affecting approximately 100 million Americans.

“Honestly, I think it’s the political opportunity of a lifetime,” remarked Dr. McCullough. “And if the answer is it’s a weakness that he can’t admit he’s wrong, then that weakness could cost him.”

[…]

Via https://vigilantfox.news/p/dr-peter-mccullough-issues-urgent

Colombia Willing to Convene Peacekeeping Force in Palestine

Colombians display the Palestinian flag outside the El Campin stadium, May 14, 2024.

Colombians display the Palestinian flag outside the El Campin stadium, May 14, 2024. | Photo: X/ @William_Garra

teleSUR Newsletter

The Arab League proposes that the UN force remain in the occupied territories until the two-state solution is implemented.

On Thursday, President Gustavo Petro announced that Colombia is willing to convene a United Nations peacekeeping force to be deployed in the occupied Palestinian territories.

“A UN peacekeeping force in Palestine. The Arab League has decided to support it and it should also be supported by Africa and Latin America. Colombia would be willing to convene it and bring medical personnel to care for the wounded population,” he said.

Earlier, during a meeting in Bahrain, the Arab League decided to call for a deployment of United Nations peacekeeping forces to the occupied Palestinian territories until the two-state solution is implemented.

The Arab countries also demand that a time limit be set for the political process and negotiations required to move towards the implementation of the two-states solution.

On Wednesday, the Irish Government confirmed that it will recognize Palestine as a State at the end of this month, in a decision shared with other countries such as Spain, Norway, Malta and Slovenia.

Deputy Prime Minister Micheal Martin is confident that the recognition of the Palestinian state will serve to improve the prospects for peace in the region.

“The specific day is not yet clear because we are still debating with other countries to jointly recognize the Palestinian state,” added Martin, who is also the Foreign Minister.

“The two-state solution is the only way Israelis and Palestinians can live together in peace,” he said, calling the Israeli ground offensive in Rafah “horrific.”

He also urged the United States to reconsider the arms support that Washington offers to the Government of Tel Aviv.

“There is a broader context involving Iran, Israel and the geopolitical situation in general, but, in my opinion, I think a clear message needs to be sent to Israel,” Martin added.

[…]

Via https://www.telesurenglish.net/news/Colombia-Willing-to-Integrate-a-Peacekeeping-Force-in-Palestine-20240516-0008.html

The Discovery of Tutankhamen’s Tomb

Episode 21 The Discovery of Tutankhamen’s Tomb

The History of Ancient Egypt

Professor Robert Brier

Film Review

Tutankhamen (aka King Tut) was the son of Ankenaten (see Egypt’s Ankenaten: The World’s First Monotheistic Ruler). Most of this lecture concerns the long search for his tomb in the Valley of the Kings. It was Howard Carter, a self-taught working class archeologist, who searched for, and ultimately found, the lost tomb. Owing to the efforts of later pharaohs to obliterate any historical record of Ankenaten and his descendants, archeologists had no knowledge of his existence prior to Carter’s discovery of Tutakamen’s name in a cartouche* in the Valley of the Kings in the early 1900s.

After a five-year search, Carter ultimately located Tutakamen’ tomb in 1922. Unlike most tombs in the Valley of the Kings, it was totally undisturbed and still contained Tutakamen’s mummy in the sarcophagus.

It took a full year to carefully clear all the beautiful golden furniture and utensils from the outer chamber.

Tutakamen’s mummy (the only intact mummy ever recovered from the Valley of the Kings) was found inside a 250 pound solid gold coffin inside a large stone sarcophagus, inside a wooden shrine in the burial chamber. The tomb contained no inscriptions or papyri describing who his parents were. The burial chamber also contained his throne and baby sandals.


*Inscribing their name inside a cartouche was the primary way Egyptians pharaohs designated their divinity.

Film can be viewed free with a library card on Kanopy.

https://www.kanopy.com/en/pukeariki/video/1492791/1492838

How the CIA Plans To Use Your Ad Tracking Data

GPS tracking map | Seamartini/Newscom

Matthew Petti

For years, the U.S. government has bought information on private citizens from commercial data brokers. Now, for the first time ever, American spymasters are admitting that this data is sensitive—but they’re leaving it up to the spy agencies on how to use it.

Last week, Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Avril Haines released a “Policy Framework for Commercially Available Information.” Her office oversees 18 agencies in the “intelligence community,” including the CIA, the FBI, the National Security Agency (NSA), and all military intelligence branches.

In the 2018 case Carpenter v. United States, the Supreme Court ruled that police need a warrant to obtain mobile phone location data from phone companies. (During the case, the Reason Foundation filed an amicus brief against warrantless snooping.) As a workaround, the feds instead started buying data from third-party brokers.

Haines’ new framework claims that “additional clarity” on the government’s policies will help protect Americans’ privacy. Yet the document is vague about the specific limits. It orders the agencies themselves to come up with “safeguards that are tailored to the sensitivity of the information” and write an annual report on how they use this data.

As national security journalist Spencer Ackerman points out in his Forever Wars newsletter, the framework doesn’t require the feds to delete old purchased data. Earlier this year, Sen. Ron Wyden (D–Ore.) called on the NSA to purge all data that it bought without a warrant and without following the Federal Trade Commission’s privacy policies.

“The framework’s absence of clear rules about what commercially available information can and cannot be purchased by the intelligence community reinforces the need for Congress to pass legislation protecting the rights of Americans,” Wyden tells Reason. “The DNI’s framework is nonetheless an important step forward in starting to bring the intelligence community under a set of principles and policies, and in documenting all the various programs so that they can be overseen.”

The senator says he will keep working to ensure “that Congress is fully informed of all these programs.” He and Rand Paul (R–Ky.) have been trying to pass the Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale Act, which would ban buying data from third-party brokers. Although the bill passed the House of Representatives last month, the Biden administration opposes it.

Wyden has been aggressively pushing for transparency on data purchases over the past few years. In 2021, he uncovered that the Defense Intelligence Agency was buying Americans’ smartphone location data. That same year, he sent a letter to Haines and CIA Director Bill Burns complaining about a secretive CIA data collection program. (In an Orwellian turn, the letter itself was classified until 2022.) This year, Wyden revealed more details on NSA data purchases.

Some of this data is collected and sold directly by the apps. For example, an intelligence company called X-Mode once paid MuslimPro, an app that offers a daily prayer calendar and a compass pointing towards Mecca, to include a few lines of location tracking code. X-Mode then sold the data to U.S. government agencies. MuslimPro claims that it did not intend to sell the data to the government and ended the arrangement after the story broke.

In other cases, the data is siphoned from advertising markets. Every time a user opens a website with paid advertisements, their location and attributes appear on a real-time bidding (RTB) exchange, a virtual auction where companies buy ad space. Data brokers posing as advertisers scrape the listings for information on users.

“Any government with a halfway decent cyber intelligence program is participating in these RTB exchanges, because it’s such an immensely valuable source of data,” says Byron Tau, author of Means of Control: How the Hidden Alliance of Tech and Government Is Creating a New American Surveillance State.

As a demonstration of how powerful RTB data is, an intelligence contractor used data from the dating app Grindr to track gay government employees from their offices to their homes, Tau reported in his book. Another firm called Near Intelligence used RTB data to help anti-abortion groups track women who visited Planned Parenthood clinics.

Earlier this year, WIRED revealed that Near Intelligence had used RTB data to build a dossier on sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein’s associates, tracing mobile phone owners from his private island to addresses in the continental United States and other countries.

The new U.S. intelligence policy is “sort of a recognition that this data is actually sensitive, which is a bit of a change,” Tau notes. “Early on, government lawyers were saying basically it’s anonymized, so no privacy problem here.”

For example, U.S. Customs and Border Protection insisted in a 2018 privacy assessment that the agency “receives only anonymized data from commercial sources…with no associated PII,” or personally identifiable information. But the border cops have used that supposedly anonymous data to track and arrest specific people.

Lawyers for the Internal Revenue Service, on the other hand, have argued that users voluntarily handed over the information, so the government is free to use it. Tau points out that users don’t really know how their data is being resold, and even the RTB exchanges themselves aren’t supposed to be used for data scraping.

“A lot of these companies that are collecting data from the global population don’t have a real consumer relationship” with the people they’re spying on, Tau says. “Unless you know how to decompile software and you’re technically savvy, you can’t even make informed choices.”

[…]

Via https://reason.com/2024/05/15/heres-how-the-cia-plans-to-use-your-ad-tracking-data/

Huge Victory! New York Lawmaker Withdraws Minor Consent Bill

statue of liberty and hands joining together

Health freedom groups are celebrating the withdrawal of New York’s proposed minor consent law, Senate Bill S8352.

The bill would have allowed children of any age to receive vaccines, drugs, dental and surgical procedures — even be hospitalized — without parental consent.

Sen. Rachel May, the bill’s sponsor, moved to withdraw or “strike” it on May 10, which removed it from the Senate docket, according to Michael Kane, founder of Teachers for Choice.

“The bill is gone — dead!” Kane told The Defender. “This only happened because New Yorkers followed Teachers for Choice, Autism Action Network and Children’s Health Defense [CHD].”

Reacting to the news, CHD CEO Mary Holland said:

“Parents and guardians across New York State can breathe huge sighs of relief that the state will not pass a foolish and dangerous law to allow children of any age to make medical decisions without parental knowledge or consent.”

Bill A6761, an identical proposal, remains in play in the New York State Assembly. But without the companion Senate bill it can’t proceed, according to John Gilmore, founder and executive director of the nonprofit Autism Action Network.

“A6761 is now a ‘one house bill’ which could still be passed by the Assembly, but without an identical bill in the Senate, it has no chance of becoming law,” Gilmore told The Defender.

Despite this victory, health freedom advocates will still need to work to stop the passage of similar bills, Gilmore said. “A big component of that will be pressuring the [bill’s] supporters to explain why they think children now have better judgment than parents when it comes to medical decisions.”

Kane also warned that the bill could resurface. “We are certain we will see this bill again in January of 2025, with nicer wording to be ‘sold’ to the lawmakers and the public,” he wrote on his Teachers for Choice Substack.

‘Medical freedom is recognized as a voting bloc in New York’

May’s withdrawal of S8352 comes after months of advocacy by a broad coalition of health freedom groups — and only days after the May 7 rally on the steps of the capitol building in Albany, which CHD.TV carried live.

Holland appeared at the rally, highlighting CHD’s legal victories against the New York City COVID-19 testing mandate and masking and vaccine mandates in New York and other states.

“This idea that they can have children make medical decisions paid for by the state without their parents’ knowledge or consent is outrageous,” she said.

Urging the protesters to “stand firm and to push back,” Holland said, “What happens in New York is definitely going to matter in D.C.”

On April 30, CHD attorneys sent letters to the New York State Senate and Assembly “detailing the bill’s many flaws,” CHD General Counsel Kim Mack Rosenberg told The Defender. Central among those flaws are the proposed law’s unconstitutionality and illegality under both federal and state law, the letters argued.

“These bills not only cut parents out of the decision-making process but also block a parent’s access to medical information about services to which their child purportedly ‘consented,’” the letters stated. “The parent would literally have no idea what happened to his child.”

Calling CHD’s legal brief “amazing,” Gilmore said it “completely dismantled S8352 and made it clear that they would be in court immediately if the legislature was silly enough to pass the bill.”

Holland, Gilmore and Kane all admitted to not knowing why May withdrew the Senate bill, but credited the rally, letters and public outreach for making a difference.

“CHD is proud to have contributed to this common-sense victory in Albany,” Holland said.

Kane acknowledged the many people who called, emailed and met with lawmakers. “They listened to us and educated their lawmakers,” he said. “Medical freedom is recognized as a voting bloc in New York and throughout the entire country!”

Other groups at the May 7 rally included My Kids My Choice, Strongest for Choice, Bravest for Choice, Uniting NYS, Restoring Childhood, Cops 4 Freedom, Finest for Choice, Medical Professionals for Informed Consent, Coalition to Project Kids NY, Frederick Douglas Foundation and Progressive Action.

Attorneys Tricia Lindsay and Bobbie Anne Cox, James Lyons-Weiler, Ph.D., of the Institute for Pure and Applied Knowledge and Shannon Joy of “The Shannon Joy Show” also spoke at the rally.

On today’s episode of “Good Morning, CHD,” Kane mentioned news of the Albany minor consent bill victory and shared a brief video compilation of rally speech excerpts and post-rally interviews.

CHD also sent letters to the New York lawmakers advising them to reject two other bills. Bills A276B/S762A would allow minors to consent without parental knowledge to treatments for sexually transmitted diseases, including the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine.

Bills A7154/S1531 would mandate reporting of all vaccinations to a central registry, violating medical privacy and physician-patient confidentiality.

“Given other bills currently pending in New York and the general atmosphere in Albany, we must continue to remain vigilant to protect parental rights and children’s health,” Mack Rosenberg said.

‘I look forward to seeing them defend that to the voters’

Bills A6761/S8352, which The Defender reported on in February, would allow New York minors under 18 to consent to medical treatment without parental knowledge or approval, as long as the child demonstrates sufficient capacity to choose.

Minors under 16 could, under certain circumstances, receive psychotropic drugs or psychotherapy without parental consent.

The bill would also allow Medicaid funds to pay for all procedures and drugs consented to by minor children.

Supporters like the American Civil Liberties Union of New York claimed the bill would ensure all youth have access to necessary healthcare. However, critics like Gilmore called it “dangerous.”

“The proponents of this bill came to the conclusion that a child is presumed to have better judgment than the parent to the point that the parent’s judgment is completely irrelevant and unnecessary,” Gilmore told The Defender.

There is disagreement over the legislation’s scope. The “active summary” on the New York State Assembly website states it applies to “homeless youth” seeking “certain … services,” but the actual text indicates it covers all minors who comprehend the risks and benefits. Gilmore claimed this summary was “deliberately misleading.”

The bill does not clearly define “minor” or how medical providers would assess a child’s capacity to comprehend or consent. Some sections suggest even infants could theoretically withhold medical information from parents.

[…]

Via https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/new-york-minor-consent-bill-withdrawn/

Vulcan Program Delay Shows US Can’t Even Copy, Much Less Replace, Russia’s Rocket Engine Know-How

By Ilya Tsukanov – Sputnik – 14.05.2024

A senior US Air Force official has sent defense contractors a strongly worded letter over delays to the Vulcan Centaur heavy-lift launch vehicle program – initiated to replace the workhorse Atlas V, which uses Russian-made RD-180 engines. The delay signals the US’s inability even to copy Russian-made equipment, a leading space researcher says.

US Air Force Assistant Secretary Frank Calvelli has sent the heads of Boeing and Lockheed Martin’s United Launch Alliance space divisions an “unusually blunt” appeal highlighting Pentagon concerns over the years-long delays to the Vulcan rocket project.

“I am growing concerned with ULA’s ability to scale manufacturing of its Vulcan rocket and scale its launch cadence to meet our needs. Currently there is military satellite capability sitting on the ground due to Vulcan delays,” Calvelli complained.

“As the owners of ULA, and given the manufacturing prowess of Boeing and Lockheed Martin corporations, I recommend that you work together over the next 90 days to complete an independent review of ULA’s ability to scale its launch cadence to meet” contract requirements, the official urged.

Calvelli expressed concerns about the ULA’s poor flight record to date, pointing out that to meet its contract obligations, it would have to launch 25 missions for the Pentagon by the end of 2027. The alliance, separately bound to launch 38 rockets for Amazon’s Kuiper internet satellite constellation, launched only three missions through 2023.

“Launch is critical to our ability to transform our space architecture. We are counting on Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and the ULA team to be successful in getting critical capabilities into space for our warfighters,” the assistant secretary wrote.

The United Launch Alliance kicked off the Vulcan’s development a decade ago amid a push by Washington to phase out the purchase of Russian-made RD-180 engines used on the Vulcan’s predecessor, the Atlas V, to put satellites into orbit. The Vulcan has a stated launch capacity of 27.2 tons, and an estimated expected cost of $100-$200 million per launch, compared to 8.2-18.85 tons and $1090 million per launch for the Atlas V, depending on variant.

Initially projected to start flying in 2019, the Vulcan program has faced half a decade of delays, owing partly to major issues with the rocket’s BE-4 engines, developed by Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin space company. The first Vulcan rocket successfully launched in January of this year, but quickly ran into new problems, including delays to the development of the Air Force’s Soviet-inspired Dream Chaser spaceplane.

The program will require a second flight before it can be certified by the Pentagon for use for national security and intelligence collection-related missions, with ULA expecting the program’s second launch to take place sometime later this year.

Calvelli did not elaborate on the nature of his concerns with the Vulcan program, instead shifting the discussion to national security and the US’s strategic competition with Beijing.

“The United States continues to face an unprecedented strategic competitor in China, and our space environment continues to become more contested, congested and competitive. We have seen exponential growth of in-space activity, including counterspace threats, and our adversaries would seek to deny us the advantage we get from space during a potential conflict,” he wrote.

ULA assures that it’s on track to ramping up its rocket production capabilities, with CEO Tony Bruno telling media that the Vulcan “is much less expensive” than the Atlas V with its Russian-made RD-180s, and that future plans to reuse the new, American-made engines will result in “economies of scale” that will make it “cheaper over time.”

Boeing responded to Calvelli’s letter by promising to get “on more of a wartime footing to stay ahead of the threat,” and agreed with the senior Air Force officer’s sense that “a quicker and more reliable launch cadence is critical to meeting that need.”
Rocket Science

The problems surrounding the Vulcan rocket and its engines signal major issues for US space rocket engineering, with the ULA delay demonstrating that American rocket scientists currently can’t even effectively copy Russian engines, much less create safe, reliable engines of their own, says Dr. Natan Eismont, a leading researcher at the Russian Academy of Scientists’ Space Research Institute, told Sputnik.

“There have been attempts to copy RD-180 engines from the moment they were sold to the Americans,” Eismont recalled. From the early 2000s onward, “launches were carried out using the Atlas III, and then a lot using the Atlas V, [which] provided for nearly half of all American launches. This is significant…There were attempts to copy the RD-180 from the start, and to this day they remain just that – attempts. The Americans haven’t been able to create an engine with characteristics close to matching the RD-180.”

Created in the 1990s, the RD-180 is a derivative of the legendary RD-170/171 series of rocket engines, developed in the 1980s by Energomash for the super-heavy Energiya launch vehicle, which was designed to shuttle up to 100 tons of useful cargo into Low Earth Orbit, to launch the Buran space shuttle, and deploy the next generation of space station components, and pieces of large, Moon and Mars-faring spacecraft of the future.

With the Soviet space program curtailed dramatically after the USSR’s collapse, budding cooperation with the US in the 1990s instead led to the development of the RD-180, and the export of over 120 of these engines to the US between 2000 and 2021.

The question of why the Americans have not been able to develop an engine with characteristics comparable to the RD-180, or even copy the Russian-made engine, stems from a problem which has plagued the US going back almost to the start of the space age, Eismont says.

“Efficiency is measured by specific thrust [the ratio of net thrust/total intake airflow, ed.], which for the RD-180 is 400 tons from the Earth’s surface, and 430 tons in a vacuum. These characteristics are generally achievable. But there’s also the specific impulse [a measure of how efficiently the engine generates thrust, ed.] and here, no rocket apart from ours has been able to achieve comparable parameters. Because to obtain characteristics comparable to those achieved by the RD-180, one must use a fairly high level of pressure in the combustion chamber – more than 200 atmospheres,” which can be dangerous if done improperly, the academic explained.

“At the same time, high-frequency oscillations arise,” Eismont added. “The secret lies in determining the moment during testing after which these fluctuations become possible, and immediately turning off the engine at that precise moment. How to do that – what parameters are necessary here, what parameters are acceptable, and how issues can be overcome – it appears that no one apart from our specialists knows this. Simply handing over the engine with all its documentation is not enough. Because there are subtleties in the manufacture of the engine which are difficult to convey using documentation.”

That’s not to say that American rocket scientists will not be able to ever overcome these difficulties, the observer emphasized. They can and will, but doing so “requires a lot of money and time,” and knowledge enough to pinpoint when testing enters the danger zone to prevent the destruction of “very expensive” test equipment.

Solving this issue will be “critical” for the Americans, Eismont believes.

“Here, [the ULA] can turn to [Space X CEO Elon] Musk, where, in general, the same tasks were set, and the company has its own rocket engine. For Musk too, everything didn’t work out straight away or to the end. Here, in general, we can say that Musk has not achieved the required level of reliability. SpaceX’s engine is in fact also an attempt to copy the RD-180… They are probably further along than say Boeing or others involved [in the Vulcan program, ed.]. But nevertheless, he had to come to terms with the fact that he could not manage without accidents. That is, the process turned out to be slower and more expensive than planned,” the academic explained.

Besides documentation, what US rocket scientists are really lacking is specialists, who can’t be replaced by imported engines, technical or even testing documentation.
“What you need are people involved in the project. Who will give the Americans these people? No one,” Eismont said.

This isn’t anything new, the academic recalled, pointing out that the US has had problems with its rocketry programs going back to the Apollo program and the days of the Saturn 5 rocket. “If you look at the technical characteristics of these American engines, they were strikingly worse than those that the USSR had at the time,” he said.

“It’s difficult to say why this was, but the Americans lagged behind here from the start. As for Soviet and Russian engines, they display an exceptional level of reliability. From the time that the Americans purchased these particular engines from us, they have not had any accidents. That is, the entire program was developed and carried out in accordance with the experience accumulated by that time by Energomash. Here, they really are ahead of everyone else.”

Ivan Moiseev, the head of the Russian Institute of Space Policy, echoed Eismont’s assessment regarding the RD-180, telling Sputnik that this is an “excellent” engine, with “not a single failure in over 100 launches.”

“The contract was concluded in 1996 and completed in 2021 – three years ago. Accordingly, the Americans still have some engines, they can still launch the Atlas V,” Moiseev said.

[…]

Via https://sputnikglobe.com/20240514/vulcan-programs-delay-shows-us-cant-even-copy-much-less-replace-russias-rocket-engine-know-how-1118431306.html

Strategic setbacks for US, Israel as Resistance Axis gains ground in Syria

(Photo credit: The Cradle)

Khalil Nasrallah

For several years, the presence of the region’s Axis of Resistance forces in Syria has remained vulnerable to US and Israeli attacks across the country, from east to west. The US has persistently attempted to disrupt the communication routes along the Tehran–Beirut axis, through which Damascus plays an important link.

Starting in 2017, after eliminating ISIS from this key border crossing, Axis forces have safeguarded passage of vehicles through the vital Al-Qaim–Al-Bukamal road and effectively established rules of engagement in eastern Syria, gradually limiting Washington’s tactical flexibility and dominance. This was a strategically important development – maintaining a foothold west of the Euphrates River to the far southeast of Syria continues to be essential for both state and non-state actors in the resistance.

A shift in tactical approach 

Since the Palestinian resistance’s Operation Al-Aqsa Flood last October, many new shifts have emerged on the ground in eastern Syria. With an uptick in Iraqi resistance activities targeting US bases in both Syria and Iraq, a sort of tentative peace emerged in early February, coinciding with Kataib Hezbollah’s temporary suspension of operations.

During this period, the resistance forces secured new advancements that solidified their position, primarily because Washington had to grudgingly acknowledge the new ground realities – a fait accompli, if you will.

Although the US continued to carry out “retaliatory” strikes targeting the Iraqi resistance, which, to many, seemed to restore some level of peace, this came with significant compromises.

According to information obtained by The Cradle, the resistance groups have not only established a more pronounced military and political stance during this period of relative calm but have also forced the US to accept crucial losses in the field.

In short, not only has Washington retreated from its provocative operations against regional resistance forces, but Tel Aviv has likewise shown reluctance to launch further raids – so far – in eastern Syria to assassinate fighters affiliated with Lebanon’s Hezbollah.

The Israeli retreat is not a unilateral decision but a result of US recalibration of these risks. The occupation army cannot launch operations without the American green light and intelligence data, and Washington is currently reluctant to cover Israeli actions that will draw the US deeper into the morass in Syria and Iraq. It also seeks to avoid further resistance attacks on US bases and occupied Syrian oil fields, especially now that it has experienced direct blows from targeted munitions.

It is also not insignificant that the Iraqi resistance has directly targeted key Israeli ports. Tel Aviv cannot afford opening up further military fronts eight months into a conflict in which it is incapable of winning on a single front, in Gaza.

Rules of engagement in Eastern Syria

The rules of engagement in eastern Syria are distinct from those governing interactions in the western and central regions of the country, which primarily involve the Israeli entity and Resistance Axis forces alongside Damascus.

In the east, the main opposition to the resistance forces is the illegal US military occupation and its Kurdish allies.

This region, stretching across the Euphrates River to Albu Kamal, which abuts Iraq’s Al-Qaim crossing, represents a strategic foothold for the Resistance Axis established in 2017. This was achieved during the “Great Dawn” operations, a series of offensives in three stages led by resistance forces, the Syrian army, and their Russian allies.

These operations enabled the Syrian and Iraqi resistance forces to reach and secure the Al-Qaim crossing, effectively reconnecting the two countries for the first time since 2011, which offered the Axis a world of new tactical advantages.

The establishment of this route, known as the Tehran–Beirut road, was perceived by the US and Israelis as a strategic geopolitical setback to their goal of severing relations and routes between Iran and the Mediterranean. In response, Washington intensified its efforts to destabilize this area through raids and pressures and by supporting attacks by ISIS cells and other militant groups, aiming to prevent the resistance forces from cementing their positions and achieving stability.

These tensions would escalate significantly towards the end of 2019 and into early 2020, following US claims that its forces in Kirkuk were targeted in a rocket attack attributed to the Iraqi resistance.

Washington responded provocatively by launching heavy strikes against an Iraqi resistance faction in Al-Qaim, killing at least fifty fighters in an operation closely followed by the targeted assassinations of Iranian Quds Force Commander General Qassem Soleimani and Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Units (PMU) Deputy Head Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis.

One key goal of this unprovoked US escalation was to prevent the resistance connectivity project, specifically cutting off the roads of communication between Tehran–Baghdad–Damascus–Beirut, which is seen as threatening both the US presence and Israel’s security.

Following the strike on the Ain al-Assad airbase earlier this year, resistance forces moved to intensify their targeting of US military bases using missiles and drones, conducted multiple operations in the Syrian Desert to safeguard transit routes against Washington-backed terror groups, and established protective measures around the US occupation base in Al-Tanf, located near the Syrian–Jordanian–Iraqi border intersection.

Through these coordinated efforts, the Axis of Resistance imposed new rules of engagement, effectively balancing the scales by linking their actions at Albu Kamal and Al-Qaim with significant retaliatory strikes against US bases.

This approach led to a noticeable reduction in direct US military engagements – which, interestingly and unsurprisingly, coincided with a spike in ISIS cells attempting infiltrations in both Syria and Iraq.

This state of affairs persisted until the Iraqi resistance increased its operations against US troops in both Syria and Iraq, partly in solidarity with the Palestinian resistance in the Gaza Strip.

West Asia’s new reality

Between the rules of engagement that preceded the events of 7 October and those that followed the targeting of US bases, significant changes have occurred, especially after Iraqi resistance operations showcased the vulnerabilities of the American deterrence strategy.

The illegal US bases have been exposed as unsafe, not only in Syria and Iraq but also extending to Jordan. The results of the resistance operations can be summarized as follows:

The Axis has successfully established and strengthened its ground presence in areas Washington once viewed as its own stomping ground and has achieved a de facto truce that benefits long-term resistance goals across military, economic, and political domains.

Consequently, resistance troops are now more effectively pursuing the remnants of US-backed ISIS cells within the depths of the Syrian Desert. These terror cells, though engaged in continuous disruptive operations, are no longer seen as posing a strategic threat.

[…]

Via https://thecradle.co/articles/strategic-setbacks-for-us-israel-as-the-resistance-axis-gains-ground-in-syria

DOJ Trying to Protect Pfizer From Whistleblower Lawsuit

GiveSendGo - Seeking Justice: Support Our Qui Tam Whistleblower: The ...

By Daniel Greer

A high-profile healthcare lawsuit in Beaumont, Texas, is flying under the radar—which is just how the federal government and Pfizer want it. 

The Department of Justice recently argued that a whistleblower lawsuit against Pfizer, filed by Brook Jackson, should be dismissed.

Jackson, a 20-year veteran in clinical trial administration employed by a third-party vendor (Ventavia Research Group), worked on Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine trials in 2020. Alarmed by what she witnessed, Jackson raised concerns to her superiors, Pfizer, and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in September 2020.

She claimed the trial was being run, documented, and reported in a manner that violated Federal law and was potentially dangerous.

Hours after contacting the FDA on September 25, 2020, Jackson was fired. Her sealed whistleblower complaint seemed to stall, with the FDA not investigating her claims. Faced with inaction, Jackson filed a lawsuit.

As the case progressed towards discovery, the DOJ intervened, asking the judge to dismiss the case. Jackson argues that the government failed to articulate a legitimate reason for dismissal and did not demonstrate why the burdens of continued litigation outweigh its benefits.

Disturbingly, a former FDA lawyer who worked at the agency when Jackson’s complaint was filed has moved to the DOJ and is now representing the government in its attempt to shut down the suit, raising concerns about regulatory capture and the use of government to shield companies from accountability.

In 2021, the British Medical Journal published an article investigating Jackson’s claims and found them credible. The journal’s investigation concluded that Jackson’s account was supported by documentation and raised serious questions about the integrity of Pfizer’s vaccine trials and the FDA’s oversight.

Other former Ventavia employees vouched for Jackson’s complaint, describing a “helter-skelter” work environment and lack of oversight.

Despite evidence and corroboration, the FDA did not inspect Ventavia after Jackson’s complaint, and Pfizer did not mention any problems at Ventavia in its FDA submission for emergency use authorization.

BMJ’s findings lend significant credibility to Jackson’s claims and raise serious questions about the integrity of Pfizer’s vaccine trial data, the adequacy of regulatory oversight, and, ultimately, the approved emergency use authorization.

Should the court grant the DOJ’s request for dismissal, it could send a chilling message to would-be whistleblowers and undermine public trust in the vaccine approval process. The BMJ investigation suggests that Jackson’s concerns deserve a thorough examination, which might only occur if her lawsuit moves forward.

Additionally, the revelation that a former FDA official involved in the vaccine’s approval is now working for the DOJ and arguing for the lawsuit’s dismissal after the FDA appears to have outed Jackson to her employer, ultimately leading to her firing, raises further questions about potential conflicts of interest and regulatory capture.

[…]

Via https://lyumon1834.wordpress.com/2024/05/14/the-doj-is-trying-to-protect-pfizer-from-a-whistleblower-lawsuit/