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The Most Revolutionary Act

Parliament speaker Berri cautions Lebanese nation against being dragged into sedition

Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri

Press TV

Lebanon’s Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri has cautioned the Lebanese nation against being drawn into “sedition” following the US-sponsored framework agreement between the Beirut government and the Tel Aviv regime.

“O my people in Lebanon, all of Lebanon, this is sedition,” Berri stated on Saturday, alluding to the agreement and the Hezbollah resistance movement’s disapproval of the deal.

“Be in strife like a young camel: neither a back to be ridden nor an udder to be milked,” Berri continued, quoting Imam Ali ibn Abi Taleb. This quote serves as a warning to the faithful to avoid being entangled in sedition.

Separately, a lawmaker from Hezbollah’s political wing stated that Lebanese officials who entered into a framework agreement with Israel on Friday in Washington would be unable to enforce the deal without inciting a civil war.

Lebanese “authorities will not be able to implement the agreement signed in Washington unless they resort to civil war with American backing,” Hassan Fadlallah — a member of the Loyalty to the Resistance Bloc — stated, as his party has consistently opposed direct talks between Israel and Lebanon.

He further asserted that “what transpired in Washington is an effort to undermine the Islamabad path, and without the resistance (Hezbollah), nothing will succeed,” referring to the memorandum of understanding between Tehran and Washington aimed at halting the US-Israeli war of aggression against the Islamic Republic of Iran, which includes Lebanon.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that a framework agreement has been established between Lebanon and “Israel,” characterizing the deal as an initial step in what he referred to as a “challenging journey.”

Rubio indicated that the agreement would create a legal basis for negotiations between the two parties, while underscoring that “this is merely the beginning of the beginning,” and added that “there remains a lengthy path ahead for Lebanon and Israel.”

Yechiel Leiter, the Israeli ambassador to the United States, asserted that the framework signifies that “the pathway to peace between Israel and Lebanon is open.”

In the meantime, the Israeli regime’s prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised the agreement as a significant accomplishment for the occupying regime.

Furthermore, Netanyahu stated that “Israel” would prevent Lebanese citizens or Hezbollah from returning to the security belt area under Israeli control, emphasizing that “Israel” would continue to occupy regions of southern Lebanon until “Hezbollah is disarmed.”

Israeli Channel 12 reported that a senior Israeli official referred to the agreement with the Lebanese government as a “remarkable achievement for Israel.”

The Lebanese Embassy in the United States announced on Friday that the execution of the framework agreement with Israel will commence with the withdrawal of Israeli troops from two designated pilot areas in southern Lebanon, followed by the deployment of the Lebanese army in those regions.

In a statement released after the signing ceremony held in Washington, which marked the conclusion of the fifth round of discussions between Beirut and Tel Aviv, the embassy clarified that the agreement “stipulates the implementation of arrangements in two pilot areas, which include an Israeli withdrawal, the deployment of the Lebanese army, and the disarmament of non-state armed groups.”

Furthermore, it noted that these preliminary actions represent “the initial step towards a gradual and comprehensive withdrawal from all Lebanese territory, ensuring complete respect for Lebanon’s sovereignty.”

The embassy emphasized that the agreement was reached “under the leadership of President Joseph Aoun, in collaboration with Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, and through the coordinated efforts of Lebanon’s constitutional institutions.”

Thus, Lebanon has embarked on “a sovereign path founded on dialogue rather than conflict,” the statement concluded.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/06/27/771185/Parliament-speaker-Berri-cautions-Lebanese-nation-against-being-dragged-into-sedition-

IRGC Navy strikes US military targets in retaliation for attack on Iranian coastal areas

File photo of Iranian missiles

Press TV

The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Navy has struck American military targets in the region in retaliation for earlier aggression against Iranian coastal areas.

The force made the remarks in a statement issued on Friday, saying its reprisal “targeted the deployment sites of the US terrorist military in the region.”

It noted that the retaliation came after American forces launched airstrikes against areas lying along the Iranian coastline as part of the United States’ changeless “pattern of breaching its commitments.”

Waging the aggression, Washington used “various pretexts, including the passage of a non-compliant vessel through an unauthorized route in the Strait of Hormuz,” the statement added.

Earlier, the United States Central Command had reported carrying out attacks against some targets in Iran

CENTCOM that overseas the American forces deployed to the West Asia region, alleged it had staged the aggression in return for, what it described as, a Thursday drone strike against a vessel, which it named as Singapore-flagged cargo vessel MV Ever Lovely. The strike, it claimed, took place as the vessel was departing the Strait of Hormuz along the Omani coast.

The Islamic Republic has, on all occasions, categorically rejected any allegations of targeting non-military objects, while warning about attempts at trying to implicate the country in such attacks by staging “false flag” operations.

The IRGC Navy also noted that the United States sought to violate its commitments under a memorandum of understanding recently signed between the two sides “through various provocations.”

Warning against further provocations

“And it has now received the necessary response,” the statement went on, referring to the force’s retaliation. “The same will apply to any future violations,” it added.

“Should this aggression be repeated, our response will be broader than this.”

The signing of the MoU was preceded by a ceasefire announced on April 7 by US President Donald Trump in the latest bout of unprovoked American-Israeli aggression against the Islamic Republic.

Following the announcement, the United States repeatedly violated the ceasefire only to face determined Iranian reprisal on each occasion.

[…]

Trump’s Board of Peace claims right to confiscate Palestinian land in Gaza, immunity from prosecution

(Photo credit: White House)

The Cradle

JUN 27, 2026

The US president has proposed that Washington ‘take over’ Gaza, expel its Palestinian inhabitants, and rebuild it as the ‘Riviera of the Middle East’

 The Board of Peace for Gaza is planning to grant itself sweeping legal immunity for its actions in the devastated Palestinian enclave, The Guardian reported on 27 June.

According to a draft resolution obtained by the British daily, the organization would also be allowed to obtain public property in Gaza “free of charge.”

The “sensitive but unclassified” draft of the resolution includes language extending immunity from “arrest, detention or legal proceedings in the courts or other entities in Gaza.”

The UN Security Council has authorized the Board of Peace to oversee the administration of Gaza until 31 December 2027.

The protection would extend to every member of the Board of Peace and its administrative affiliate, the Office of the High Representative (OHR), led by Bulgarian diplomat Nickolay Mladenov.

Legal protections would also apply to Palestinian technocrats slated to administer Gaza, to foreign troops from the International Stabilization Force (ISF) deployed to the strip, and to nonresident contractors.

“It is unclear if the document is attempting to relieve the Board of Peace and its affiliates from prosecution in international courts, in addition to potential claims in Gaza,” The Guardian wrote.

The activities of the Board of Peace could be illegal under international law, as they bolster Israel’s illegal occupation of Gaza following its genocide of Palestinians in the strip.

The seven-member Board of Peace “executive board” includes Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner; special envoy Steve Witkoff; White House chief of staff, Susie Wiles; and national security adviser, Marco Rubio.

Witkoff and Kushner are notable real estate investors in New York. They, along with Israeli businessmen, could benefit financially from managing the reconstruction of Gaza.

In February 2025, Trump proposed that the US “take over” Gaza, expel its nearly 2 million residents, and rebuild it as the “Riviera of the Middle East,” presumably for Israeli Jewish settlers to inhabit.

Though multiple countries have pledged billions of dollars to join the Board of Peace, most have not yet transferred any funds to the organization.

No reconstruction contracts have been issued yet, and the international stabilization force has not been established.

Six lawyers specializing in US contracting law and international armed conflict who reviewed the draft resolution for The Guardian raised concerns about its contents.

“[It is] unclear how Board of Peace officials, soldiers, and contractors would be held accountable if there are shootings or accidents that affect Gaza residents, or even how the group might resolve routine disputes over business or land use there,” the lawyers said.

“They are basically saying there’s no external oversight, including applicable international law regarding occupation,” said Noura Erakat, an international law professor at Rutgers University.

“It’s creating a legal system unto itself.”

The final section of the draft resolution gives the Board of Peace the ability to confiscate Palestinian land, similar to the way Israel confiscates Palestinian land in the occupied West Bank.

The board “shall be provided, free of charge, with public premises and facilities needed for the accomplishment of the missions in Gaza.”

Trump’s Board of Peace plans to build a base for the ISF, as well as logistics hubs to facilitate its operations there.

[…]

Via https://thecradle.co/articles/trumps-board-of-peace-claims-right-to-confiscate-palestinian-land-in-gaza-immunity-from-prosecution-report

Hezbollah chief declares Lebanon-Israel agreement ‘null and void’

(Photo credit: Reuters / Zohra Bensemra)

The Cradle

JUN 27, 2026

The resistance leader accused the Lebanese government of effectively granting Israel what they failed to achieve militarily

Hezbollah Secretary-General Naim Qassem called the US-sponsored Lebanon-Israel agreement “null and void” on 27 June, saying it legitimizes Israeli occupation of Lebanon and vowed to continue defending Lebanese territory.

“This agreement is null and void,” Qassem said, adding that Hezbollah “will continue as a resistance in the field to defeat the occupation. We did not leave the field in the most difficult circumstances, and we will not leave it.”

Qassem emphasized that the Beirut ignored the Iran-US Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) agreement, which “placed a halt to the war on Lebanon as its first item,”  and chose to “abandon the cards of strength” while granting Israel “what it wants for free.”

The Secretary-General asserted that linking the enemy’s withdrawal to the removal of weapons across the country is a “dangerous violation” of Lebanon’s constitutional law and a betrayal of the thousands who have been killed by Israeli attacks across the country.

He added that the current proposal effectively “legitimizes the occupation for years” and allows Israel to dictate internal security matters under the guise of an ”experimental peace.”

“The experimental period might extend over months in the two regions,” referring to the so-called “pilot zones” where authority would gradually transfer from Israeli forces to the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) as part of the first phase of the agreement.

He added that “and there will be no transition to another phase except with a certificate of ‘good conduct’ from Israel, implementing what Israel failed to achieve on the battlefield.”

On Saturday morning, the Israeli military claimed it had taken “full control” of Ali al-Taher Hill, the strategically vital heights overlooking the southern Lebanese city of Nabatieh.

Hezbollah dismissed the claims as fabricated propaganda, while a Lebanese military source told Al Jazeera, “We have not detected any advance by Israeli occupation forces toward the Ali al-Taher Heights in the Nabatieh district.”

Since the signing of the framework agreement, Israel continues to commit various military violations across the south of Lebanon, including artillery shelling, drone strikes, and ground incursions with heavy machine-gun fire.

The signing of the framework was met with mass protests in Beirut and other areas, as demonstrators blocked roads and burned tires.

In response, Lebanese judicial authorities ordered security forces to use all necessary measures to disperse gatherings and restore public order.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomed the deal, describing it as a major achievement for Israel and stating that Israeli troops would remain in the “security zones” in southern Lebanon.

[…]

Via https://thecradle.co/articles/hezbollah-chief-declares-lebanon-israeli-agreement-null-and-void

War is all that remains

Russia's War in Ukraine, in Photos - The New York Times

Dmitry Orlov

Since diplomacy, in the western understanding of the term, has degenerated into an exchange of insults and the laborious process of negotiating agreements which nobody ever intends to keep, all that remains is war. Or, perhaps, the plural form — wars — is more appropriate, since there are several ones going on at once. In each case, there is a battlefield, there are military actions taking place (or preparations for them) and there is, inevitably, an eventual outcome. Motivations for these conflicts range from outright delusion to political expediency all the way to ideological imperatives and the demands of national survival.

A lot has already been said and written about the death of diplomacy in the West, but a recent exchange is just too perfect to pass by. When the Russians pointed out that the Americans reneged on the agreements reached during the Putin-Trump summit in Anchorage, Alaska on August 15, 2025, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio pointed out that these were not agreements, just proposals. As it turns out, it was the Americans who proposed and the Russians who accepted the proposals. Thus, the Americans made proposals which they themselves did not agree to. What could possibly be the point of trying to reach a peace agreement with such people? There is no point, and that just leaves war.

Although it is commonly thought that the goal of war is victory — and this is most often the stated goal of any war, to preserve the morale of the troops and to maintain the support of the populace which pays for it — just as often the goal is the perpetual continuation of the conflict. A prime example of such a perpetual conflict was the Cold War. It is possible to argue that it was not truly a war because it was never fought; it is also possible to argue that it was fought more or less continuously. The Cold War was fought in dozens of regional wars, large and small. In case you need a refresher, here is a quick summary of them:

Korea (1950–1953): A major direct clash in which US and UN forces fought Chinese and North Korean troops supported and resupplied by the USSR. The US managed to fight this war to a permanent stalemate which left the Korean peninsula permanently divided at the 38th parallel, with the North allied with Russia and China and the south under permanent occupation by American troops.

Vietnam (1955–1975): The US intervened in French Indochina, taking over for failing colonialist France to stop Vietnamese quest for independence while the Soviets backed the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese military in a prolonged and devastating conflict which ended when the US-supported regime in the south collapsed, the Americans were routed and the north triumphed.

Afghanistan (1979–1989): The USSR intervened to prop up a socialist government, prompting the US (and allies) to arm, train, and fund the Mujahideen insurgents. The last Soviet troops left Afghanistan on February 15, 1989. The withdrawal was carried out in accordance with the Geneva Accords, and the commander of the 40th Army, Lieutenant General Boris Gromov, became the last serviceman to cross the border bridge over the Amu Darya River, flags flying, as seen in the photo above. The socialist government of Mohammad Najibullah stayed in power for approximately three years and two months following the final withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan. Its collapse was precipitated by the withdrawal of Soviet support under General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev. A civil war then raged until September 27, 1996, when Kabul was taken over by the Taliban. The Americans then occupied Afghanistan from October 7, 2001 until August 30, 2021 in a failed effort to dislodge the Taliban, having falsely accused the Taliban for complicity in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.

Cuba: The US and USSR almost found themselves in a nuclear war during the badly misnamed Cuban Missile Crisis (1962). It was, in fact, the Turkish Missile Crisis: the US positioned nuclear missiles in Turkey which threatened the USSR; the USSR responded by positioning nuclear missiles in Cuba which threatened the US; in the end, each side withdrew their missiles.

Africa: The USSR actively supported decolonization movements throughout the continent, helping a score of countries achieve independence, including Algeria, Angola, Republic of the Congo, Egypt, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa (where the war was against apartheid) and Zimbabwe. After the collapse of the USSR these relationships were put on pause for a time but have since been renewed and revitalized. The 2nd Russia–Africa Summit was held in St. Petersburg, Russia, on July 27–28, 2023. The summit drew delegates from 49 of the 54 African Union member states, including 17 heads of state. The 3rd summit will be held in Moscow in late October of 2026.

The African national liberation movements included quite a lot of armed conflict. Official records indicate a combined total of 1,100,000 to 1,800,000 casualties for the major anti-colonial conflicts in Algeria, Angola, Mozambique, and Zimbabwe alone. These were, to avoid the use of euphemisms such as “conflict”, wars of national liberation.

[…]

Let us enumerate the stakeholders of the war in the former Ukraine: Russia, the US, European members of the EU and of NATO, various other nations not hostile toward Russia and, of course, the former Ukraine itself (the Kiev regime and the population of the former Ukraine). Each of these stakeholders is disinterested in a quick end to the war in the former Ukraine, each for its own set of reasons.

Russia’s ultimate goal for the former Ukraine is to render it harmless without burdening itself unduly or suffering too many casualties. What precipitated the conflict can be reduced to two main factors. There was the threat of NATO troops stationed on Ukrainian soil, right on the invasion path toward Moscow followed by both Napoleon and Hitler.

There was also Kiev’s incipient genocide of the Russian population in the Ukraine’s former eastern provinces of Donetsk and Lugansk which served as the trigger for the launching of Russia’s Special Military Operation in February of 2022 as an R2P (Responsibility to Protect) mission. The dramatically increased shelling of Donetsk by the Ukrainians in February of 2022 provided ample justification for it.

The imperative to save Russian lives in Donetsk and Lugansk overlapped with Russia’s secondary goal, which was to save numerous Russians still living in the territories held by the Kiev regime. Thus, carpet-bombing Ukrainian cities, as the Americans or the British or other NATO forces would have done (and, indeed, have done in similar circumstances) is not something that the Russian government would ever consider doing.

Quite the opposite: those Russians who are still living in Kiev-held territories are offered visa-free entry into the Russian Federation and a path to Russian citizenship and integration into Russian society. Since all Ukrainians speak Russian, the vast majority of them as their first language, they reintegrate easily.

If the war were to end, it could do so in at least three different ways. The first way, entirely unacceptable to Russia on every level, would be to agree to a cease fire, freeze the conflict at the current line of separation (which runs through what under Russian law comprises sovereign Russian territory, though it will not do so for much longer given the pace of Russian advance) and allow the stationing of NATO troops on territory still controlled by the Kiev regime. This end to the war would be equivalent to a defeat.

Another way the war could end is through a sudden, outright Russian victory. The Ukrainian forces are routed and the Ukrainian military dissolves. The US, NATO, the EU all wash their hands of the Ukrainian conflict, abandoning their Ukrainian dependents to their fate. Russia then has a chaotic, ungovernable humanitarian disaster area on their border which they somehow have to rescue from its horrible fate.

The Russians are working assiduously to liberate the remaining small patches of what is, constitutionally, Russian Federation territory in the Donetsk, Zaporozhye and Kherson regions (Lugansk has been completely liberated as of July of 2022). They just liberated Konstantinovka. There are now just two major towns left to liberate: Kramatorsk and Slavyansk. Likewise, major advances are taking place in the south, in Zaporozhye in particular. They are also making strides in building up buffer zones in Sumy and Kharkov regions to safeguard neighboring Russian regions from attack. These are some of the stated goals of the Special Military Operation and they are being achieved, albeit rather more gradually than many people would like.

Meanwhile, the Kiev regime, assisted by NATO, has been launching a great many terrorist attacks against Russian regions. Crimea has been particularly badly hit and today was forced to impose a state of emergency to deal with the damage from Ukrainan drone strikes. Other Russian regions have been affected as well, although the overall effect of these strikes is generally overestimated. These terrorist attacks are being used in a propaganda campaign in the West which aims to convince the populace that the Ukraine is winning and that therefore continued support for the Kiev regime is justified. Apparently, war, like beauty, is in the eye on the beholder. How else could we ever hope to explain the following: last Monday, in Gdańsk, Poland, US Deputy Secretary of State Jeremy Levin pompously declared that “Ukraine is winning the war.” Nothing could be further from the truth!

The Kiev regime is losing, but not for lack of trying. Its attack on Russian territory during the night of June 26 was the most massive so far in 2026. After analyzing data published by the Russian Ministry of Defense, RIA News service reported that Russian air defense systems shot down 660 Ukrainian drones. A handful of drones probably got through (no air defense system can be 100% effective). The news in Russia is quite full of stories of the damage caused by drones and drone fragments: a few people get hurt and a few houses and apartment buildings are damaged almost every day. This is, of course deplorable. But war is like that; people get hurt.

But from the point of view of the Russian government and the Russian military, this is by no means altogether bad. Russia has developed the world’s best air defense system and the Russian defense establishment will be busy selling these systems to eager customers around the world for many years to come. The conflict is allowing Russia to keep up with drone development and related technology including the battlefield use of AI systems and satellite communications. And Russia has plenty of cards left to play if the terrorist attacks ever grow too painful. In particular, Russia has the weapons in place to disable Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite system which Alex Karp’s Palantir AI uses to generate targeting information (it takes a perverse interest in girls’ schools) and which the drones then use to navigate to these targets. But doing so now would deprive Russia of the great sport of shooting down hundreds of drones every night.

[…]

Moving on to the United States, a quick end to the Ukrainian war is unlikely to be on terms acceptable to it. This makes it preferable to push off the moment when the policy of fashioning the former Ukraine into an anti-Russia and squandering countless billions in pursuit of the lofty goal of weakening Russia finally crashes and burns. Also, a premature end to this war would deprive American arms manufacturers of sales. Since weapons for the Kiev regime are now being paid for by the Europeans, it would also deprive the US of a valuable way of bleeding dry the European economy — a reasonable goal for it, since the EU is the only major economic competitor against which the US still has the ability to compete, being increasingly left behind by China, Russia and India. Lastly, many in the US still cherish the forlorn hope that the Ukrainian conflict will weaken Russia and prevent it from developing its economy. (If you believe, I have a few thousand economic sanctions to sell you at bargain basement prices.)

[…]

Via https://boosty.to/cluborlov/posts/37e694d0-880f-4404-9a9f-c798e938ccf7

Supreme Court Just Derailed Thousands of Lawsuits Against Monsanto Over Glyphosate and Cancer

In a 7-2 ruling, the Supreme Court sided with Monsanto and blocked cancer victims from suing over missing cancer warnings.

The Supreme Court just handed Monsanto a major victory.

In a 7-2 ruling in Monsanto Co. v. Durnell, the Court held that federal pesticide law (FIFRA) preempts state-law “failure-to-warn” claims. This means companies cannot be sued under state law for not including cancer warnings on Roundup labels — as long as the EPA has not required such warnings.

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The decision is expected to derail thousands of pending lawsuits from people who developed non-Hodgkin lymphoma after using Roundup.

The Supreme Court has effectively shielded Monsanto from being held accountable for not warning the public.

This is a grave mistake.

While the EPA continues to claim glyphosate is safe, multiple studies say otherwise.

A recent controlled animal study demonstrated that glyphosate can induce aggressive and fatal cancers across multiple organs — even at doses considered “safe” by U.S. and EU regulatory thresholds.

Zhang et al found a statistically significant association between glyphosate exposure and increased risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in humans. Their 2019 meta-analysis pooled data from over 65,000 participants across six studies—including more than 7,000 NHL cases—and reported a 41% increased risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma among those with the highest glyphosate exposure:

Regulators allowed worldwide glyphosate use based on a now-retracted fraudulent study ghostwritten by Monsanto staff:

A few months ago, Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology formally retracted the landmark 2000 glyphosate “safety” review by Williams, Kroes, and Munro — a paper Monsanto and global regulators have relied on for decades to assert that Roundup poses no carcinogenic risk to humans.

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The Editor-in-Chief confirmed that Monsanto employees likely secretly wrote substantial portions of the paper, despite never being listed as authors or acknowledged. The retraction states that the article’s integrity has collapsed entirely, citing undisclosed corporate authorship, omitted carcinogenicity data, financial conflicts of interest, and a complete failure by the surviving author to respond to the journal’s investigation.

Congress, regulators, and the courts must correct this disastrous mistake, as glyphosate has already invaded the bodies of over 80% of Americans.

[…]

 

China Posed to Overtake US in AI Development

A recent international survey has highlighted shifting global perceptions of the race for leadership in artificial intelligence.

According to the AI Global 2026 study by the British consultancy Public First, a significant share of people worldwide, including in Mexico, believe that China has already overtaken or is on the verge of surpassing the United States in capacity and innovation in this transformative technology.

The poll, based on more than 18,000 interviews conducted across 15 countries in May 2026, found that 42% of respondents worldwide view China as the leader in AI development, compared with 37% who still see the US as the leader.

These perceptions align with data from Stanford University’s 2026 AI Index Report, which shows that the performance gap between the leading American and Chinese AI models has narrowed dramatically to 2.7% as of March 2026. Chinese models from companies such as DeepSeek and Alibaba’s Qwen have repeatedly traded places with their US counterparts on global leaderboards since early 2025.

The competition in AI has intensified dramatically in recent years. The US has long held advantages in frontier models, private investment, and talent attraction. In 2025, private AI investment in the US reached $285.9 billion, more than 23 times China’s reported figure of $12.4 billion. However, these figures likely understate China’s total spending, which includes substantial government guidance funds and state-backed initiatives.

China leads in scientific publications, citations, AI patents, and industrial integration. Its strategy emphasizes quick adoption and efficiency, especially in response to US export restrictions on advanced chips. Open-source Chinese models frequently outperform US counterparts, such as Meta’s Llama, in downloads on platforms like Hugging Face, highlighting their accessibility and practical use.

The Stanford report notes that the US continues to lead in investment and in the creation of new, funded AI companies, yet China is advancing quickly in patents and in embedding AI across real-world economic sectors.

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt noted that the gap in certain AI capabilities has narrowed to as little as six months, with China making rapid strides in open-source development and real-world deployments, from robotics to industrial automation.

Public opinion around the world appears to be shifting. Among key US allies such as Canada, the United Kingdom, and France, majorities now view China as the AI leader. In Germany, only 23% believe the US holds the dominant position. This signals a notable shift in global narratives about technological supremacy.

In Mexico, the AI Global 2026 study reveals a nuanced picture. While nearly half the population views China as the leader, there remains greater comfort with American-developed tools: 41% of participants felt comfortable using US AI models, compared with just 27% for Chinese ones. This reflects concerns about privacy, security, and reliability associated with Chinese technology.

This viewpoint echoes throughout many parts of Latin America, where developing economies see AI as an opportunity to improve education, healthcare, and productivity, while also recognizing potential social risks. Dependence on technology from the US or China leaves the region in a fragile position amid ongoing global geopolitical conflicts.

Labor market impacts are a major concern as automation threatens roles across manufacturing, services, and administration. Globally, optimism about AI’s benefits has risen, with 59% of respondents reporting more upsides than drawbacks, while nervousness remains at 52%, indicating a complex emotional landscape.

Additional challenges include ethical concerns, algorithmic bias, cybersecurity vulnerabilities, the enormous energy consumption of data centers, and potential military applications. Strong support for international cooperation, as expressed by 64% in Mexico, underscores the need for global standards and collaborative governance.

The AI competition is accelerating innovation but also introducing significant risks. Together, the US and China control about 90% of global computing power and most investment, leaving other nations dependent on their systems. For most of the world, the wisest path is to diversify by attracting investment from the Great Powers, develop local talent through education and research, and implement balanced regulations that safeguard employment and rights while fostering innovation.

The study also emphasizes that public perception matters as much as technical progress. While the US retains an edge at the technological frontier, China is closing the gap through state determination, efficiency innovations, and open dissemination.

AI seeks to reshape nearly every aspect of society, including economics, healthcare, and governance. The ultimate winner might not be the one with the most advanced model, but the one that best translates technological potential into broad, lasting economic and social gains. Hence, AI is more than a rivalry between superpowers – it is a toolkit set to redefine the global landscape in the 21st century. Perceptions of China and the US across many regions reflect not only real progress but also shifting views on the global power balance.

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/china-overtake-us-ai-development/5931413

The Pandemic Plan Needs to Be Torn Up

The Pandemic Plan Needs to be Torn Up

By Jeffrey A Tucker

The closest thing we have in this country to a pandemic plan is called the Pandemic Action Crisis Plan or PanCap. It remains the prevailing unclassified document. It posits stay-at-home orders, school closures, business shutdowns, office closures, travel restrictions, testing, track-and-trace, and the creation and distribution of countermeasures called vaccines.

So far as anyone knows, it is still the prevailing document. It’s one of many. Nothing has changed about any of them in light of what we learned from Covid. The CDC currently hosts all these documents:

This approach has no precedent in the long history of public health. The old way was to keep calm, understand the illness, treat those affected, and use rational approaches to mitigate the impacts. The new way invented in 2005 is about command and control, pretending to manage the microbial kingdom like an engineering project.

This is still the operational manual. If a pathogen should leak and the machine clicks into gear, this is what will happen. It will be profoundly disturbing to civil society. Like last time, the results will not be good. The medicine will be worse than the disease. We can say this based on the experience from 2020 to 2023. And yet the plan survives.

The existing plan is PanCap-Adapted. It is still not posted on any government website. It was leaked to the New York Times and, again, so far as anyone knows, this remains the architecture of control. Why the latest is not posted is unclear. Don’t the American people deserve to know what their government plans for them?

It is supplemented by dozens of other documents that pertain to nearly every federal government agency and are expected to be followed by downstream agencies in states, counties, cities, and towns. This is what is called an all-of-government response.

This is not some conspiracy theory. We need only look at one related document, the Biological Incident Annex to the Response and Recovery Federal, Interagency Operational Plan as produced by FEMA. It is out of classification and available for anyone to observe. It comes into operation with any pathogen that is new, perhaps manufactured in a lab as many of them are.

Halfway through this document you find a presumption of business closures, transportation restrictions and disruptions, widespread commodities hoarding by the public, stay-at-home orders, workforce shift to virtual environment, school and childcare closures, restaurant closures, hotel closures, reduced workforce, and plant closures.

This plan is still out there, waiting to be implemented under the right circumstances. The US Constitution does not pertain. American expectations of liberty do not pertain. Law does not pertain. Even now, the idea that an emergency requires the end of all normal expectations for freedom is baked into all pandemic protocols.

At this point, you might already be asking the very obvious question. How could this be true in light of the last experience? The answer points to the core problem. We’ve never had a reckoning for the Covid period. There has been no commission, no push for changes in underlying protocols, no fundamental shifts at the top other than new political appointees, and no real national statement that what happened was wrong and destructive.

In short, nothing has changed other than public opinion. That too is extremely malleable. People these days routinely say that they won’t comply. What they mean is that under similar circumstances, they won’t comply. But the circumstances will not be similar. A strain of Ebola, for example, could have an extremely high mortality rate that does not discriminate by age. With a 21-day latency period, anyone could have it. It’s the kind of pathogenic release that strikes terror in the hearts of the bravest men and women.

The real problem here dates back more than two decades, to 2005, when federal officials first started imagining extreme plans for the management of pandemic conditions of any sort. The first document was the National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza, announced by President George W. Bush on November 1, 2005.

This high-level White House/Homeland Security Council document was driven by concerns over the H5N1 avian influenza outbreak in Asia. It outlined a whole-of-society with core pillars: stopping/slowing the spread to the US, limiting domestic impacts, and sustaining infrastructure/economy, and the production of shots.

The document in question drops some hints. In this report you will find what you must do: be “prepared to follow public health guidance that may include limitation of attendance at public gatherings and non-essential travel for several days or weeks.” The government, meanwhile, will establish “contingency systems to maintain delivery of essential goods and services during times of significant and sustained worker absenteeism.”

This was more than 20 years ago. The ominous intonations suggest eventual lockdown at least as a possibility.

Simultaneously (November 2005), the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released its detailed HHS Pandemic Influenza Plan, serving as a blueprint for public health and medical response, including surveillance, vaccines, and state/local guidance backed by force.

Then came the 2006 National Strategy Implementation Plan with 300-plus specific actions across federal agencies, states, and the private sector. This was followed by the 2008 Biological Incident Annex to the National Response Framework which integrated biological threats into broader disaster response.

From 2013 to 2018, FEMA developed the Pandemic Crisis Action Plan (PanCAP), a playbook for federal coordination, now called PanCap-Adapted. That was the operational manual for the Covid policy response. It was backed by a 2017 updated Biological Incident Annex and HHS Pandemic Influenza Plan. This was updated again in 2023, complete with all the familiar apparatus.

These days, we have the Office of Pandemic Preparedness and Response Policy (OPPR) , which was created for ongoing coordination. The people who inhabit this office are different from what they were a few years back. They are less convinced of the use of force. They are more sophisticated in their understanding of infectious disease and natural immunity. But have they changed the protocols? We do not know.

We also have widespread public knowledge that broad lockdowns had massive collateral damage: excess non-Covid deaths (delayed care, mental health, overdoses), learning loss (especially for kids), economic dislocation, supply chain breaks, and eroded trust. Sweden’s lighter-touch approach (no full school closures, no strict lockdowns) had comparable or better outcomes on mortality when adjusted for demographics, with far less disruption.

The problem is that these 20-year old protocols are all still in place. If you understand how government works, once a document and protocol are in gear, there is no dialing it back. Bureaucrats are risk-averse and do what they are told. That is how the system works.

If the presumption is that force, the quarantine power, restrictions on civil liberties, censorship, and medical countermeasures are the way forward – essentially lockdown until vaccinate – this will happen regardless of the individual volition of any political appointee.

All these documents need to be torn up. We need a complete reset of pandemic planning to what it was before 2005, before the fear, the frenzy, the wild plans for locking down, and the ambition to vaccinate our way out of a pandemic. This country dealt with uncountable numbers of disease outbreaks without wrecking civil society. The theory that society can be managed as a laboratory has proven extremely damaging. We desperately need the information we learned most recently incorporated into the protocols.

That requires a complete public rethinking of everything with an aim toward clear statements from Congress and an initiative from the White House to map out straightforward principles and a new approach. This can only happen with a national commission on the topic convened at the highest levels and promoted by the national press with public testimony and a determination to change.

The time for this is now. With so many biolabs around the world working on infectious disease, not only examining viruses but also creating them along with the countermeasures, we are certain to face a leak in the future, likely one more terrifying than the last. Yes, the countermeasures are certain to be based on modified mRNA technology, regardless of the vast disaster they created the last time.

Underlying all of this is the problem of special interests. Government officials like exercising power and passing out money. Pharmaceutical companies like making products and distributing them and depend on the liability shield government grants them. Tech companies like stay-at-home orders for obvious reasons. The national media loves an emergency because it gets eyes on screens. Even the churches and nonprofits celebrated their vast bailout funds.

It should alarm every American that, despite all the best intentions of the change in White House leadership, the deeper bureaucracy still has the same plans in place for the next infectious disease outbreak. Not only that: a July 2024 Government Accounting Office report documents how the CDC is tightening and systemizing its isolation, quarantine, and pre-pharmaceutical protocols such that they will be more, not less, severe next time.

It’s too late to make changes in the thick of a crisis. The planning and rewriting of the regulations need to begin now. The Covid experience needs a full repudiation. Otherwise, the pandemic plans in place right now constitute a genuine threat to national security. 

Coda: I asked Claude AI to generate an alternative pandemic plan based on what we learned from the last experience. Here are the results. It needs work but this shows how easy it is not to wreck society in the name of infectious disease control.

[…]

Via https://brownstone.org/articles/the-pandemic-plan-needs-to-be-torn-up/

Governments Coming for Your Retirement Savings

We’ve warned more times than I care to count that governments are likely to steal from citizens’ pension funds.

Why?

Because it’s a big pool of cash just sitting there — and when the parasite class sees money within their reach, they simply can’t help themselves.

Perhaps most importantly, governments have control over most pension funds in the world.

Sure, most people think it’s their money sitting in the pension plan, but when you look at the fine print there’s a lot that you as an investor can’t do with ‘your money’.

First up. The “lucky country,” Australia.

“The Albanese government will tap private investors and Australia’s $4.5 trillion superannuation sector to push more defence spending off budget, prompting analysts to accuse Labor of using accounting tricks to help fund a $53 billion military build-up.”

Next up for a shafting are the Brits.

“Labour’s ‘feckless and dangerous’ pension reforms backed by MPs despite ‘socialists run out of money’ fears.”

Here’s the breakdown of what these parasites are looking to do.

  • IHT on pension pots (from 2027). Defined contribution pensions will be pulled into the estate for inheritance tax purposes. Previously exempt. Effective 40% tax on anything passed to heirs above the nil-rate band. Kills the pension-as-wealth-transfer strategy entirely.
  • “Productive finance” mandates. Pension funds — particularly local government schemes — are being pressured and directed to invest in UK infrastructure, housing, and ‘growth assets’. Classic regulatory capture: your retirement savings redirected to fund government priorities, not yours.
  • DB scheme surplus extraction. Defined benefit schemes sitting on surpluses — built up by employers overpaying — are being eyed for redistribution. Proposals to let companies extract surpluses more easily, taxing them en route. Members take the risk; someone else gets the upside.
  • Consolidation/megafund push. Forcing smaller pension schemes to merge into large ‘megafunds’ under government-friendly management — fewer decision makers, easier to lean on, easier to redirect capital flows.

Bottom line: a sovereign wealth fund built by stealth, taken from private savings by conscripted allocations into “public priorities,” with IHT as the kicker to ensure anything left behind gets clipped on the way out too.

And if you’re American and think you’re going to be immune… well…

“Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson called on US authorities to prepare a back-up plan in order to avert a potential collapse in demand for Treasuries.”

It’s the same playbook, folks. Nothing new under the sun. Here are notable historical examples of governments raiding or coercing pension assets…

Direct Confiscation/Forced Restructuring

  • Hungary (2010–2011). Arguably the most brazen modern example. Orbán’s government effectively nationalised roughly $14 billion in private pension assets, giving citizens a choice: transfer funds to the state or lose state pension entitlements. Around 97% “elected” to transfer. The assets were absorbed into general revenue to meet EU deficit targets.
  • Argentina (2008). The Kirchner government nationalised roughly $30 billion in private AFJP pension funds, ostensibly to “protect” retirees from the GFC. In reality it plugged a fiscal hole and gave the state control over large equity stakes in private companies. Pensioners received government bonds instead, which Argentina subsequently defaulted on.
  • Ireland (2011). Post-GFC, the government raided the National Pension Reserve Fund (roughly €5 billion) to recapitalise banks and fund the EU/IMF bailout programme. Retirees had no say.
  • Poland (2014). The government transferred roughly 55% of private pension fund assets (mainly government bonds, roughly $50 billion) back to the state ZUS system, simultaneously reducing reported public debt to dodge EU fiscal rules. Same accounting trick Albanese is attempting now.
  • Cyprus (2013). Bank deposits above €100,000 were bailed in directly. Pension funds with bank exposure were wiped. Presented as a condition of the EU bailout.

Softer Coercion/”Directed Investment”

  • France. The government has repeatedly used the Fonds de Réserve pour les Retraites for purposes other than its stated mandate, and pressured pension funds toward domestic sovereign debt.
  • Japan. GPIF (world’s largest pension fund, roughly $1.5 trillion) has been repeatedly pressured to shift into domestic equities and JGBs to support government policy goals — functionally a state tool despite nominal independence.
  • Portugal (2010–2012). The government transferred telecom sector pension assets to the state to hit Maastricht deficit targets. Retirees got unfunded state promises in return.
  • UK (post-WWII). Pension and insurance funds were pressured to hold government gilts at below-market rates for decades to fund reconstruction. A slow-motion confiscation via financial repression rather than outright seizure.

The Australian Playbook

What Albanese is doing fits the Polish/Portuguese model — using accounting structures to shift spending off-balance-sheet while the economic cost remains real. The superannuation coercion is more subtle: rather than outright seizure, the mechanism is likely directed mandates or co-investment structures where super funds are ‘encouraged’ (with regulatory or tax incentives) to fund defence infrastructure.

The historical lesson is consistent: once governments establish the precedent that pension assets are a policy tool, the scope of “acceptable” raids expands. Hungary started with a crisis framing too.

Editor’s Note: The pension grab is only one part of a much larger story.

Governments across the West are drowning in debt, addicted to money printing, and increasingly desperate to control where capital goes. That means the risks to your money, your savings, and your personal freedom are likely to grow in the years ahead.

[…]

Via https://www.activistpost.com/governments-are-coming-for-your-retirement-savings/

Has AI Crash Begun? World Economic System on Verge of Collapsing

By Brian Shilhavy
Health Impact News

Trillion dollar AI Bubble on Verge of Popping

I have been warning the public about the AI technology bubble since the last quarter of 2022, when the first AI chat bot, ChatGPT, was released to the public and became the most downloaded app of all time.

And while there almost was a crash in the first quarter of 2023 when many of Silicon Valley’s largest banks collapsed, the U.S. Government stepped in and bailed them out.

The main reason why the crash has not happened yet, is because most of the largest technology companies such as Google, Microsoft, Amazon.com, etc., all had huge cash reserves to fund their investments into AI in the beginning.

Fast forward to today as we end the second quarter of 2026, and almost ALL of those cash reserves have been spent, and most of these technology companies are taking on debt through corporate bond sales, because they are too afraid of being “left behind” in the great AI race, which is a race to nowhere, and will end very badly, for all of us.

While I have been a mostly dissenting voice in the alternative media sounding the alarms against AI spending for the past three and a half years, I am no longer.

After three straight days of losses on the NASDAQ including huge losses on Monday and Tuesday this week for the Big Tech companies, I would estimate that about 90% of the corporate news financial analysts are talking about an AI crash now, and much of it is not even speculative, but treating it as a certainty.

[…]

Via https://t.me/healthimpact/3626