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About stuartbramhall

Retired child and adolescent psychiatrist and American expatriate in New Zealand. In 2002, I made the difficult decision to close my 25-year Seattle practice after 15 years of covert FBI harassment. I describe the unrelenting phone harassment, illegal break-ins and six attempts on my life in my 2010 book The Most Revolutionary Act: Memoir of an American Refugee.

Nightmare of Jerusalem Part III – Iran Unloads All Their Obsolete Missiles on Israel

Nightmare of Jerusalem Part III

Press TV (2025)

Film Review

Part III concerns the actual attack Iran launched on Israel (in retaliation for the April 1, 2024 bombing of their Damascus embassy) on 13 April, 2024. The attacks seems to have had two major goals 1) extreme intimidation of the Israeli government and civilians and 2) a test of ability of NATO and Israel to intercept their missiles. What I found most intriguing about this episode is that they gave Israel, the US and all neighboring territories a 72 hour warning of the missile attack and they purposely used their old, obsolete missiles. Iran specifically stipulated they would call off the attack if Israel committed to ending the genocide in Gaza.

Operation True Promise proved to be extremely cost effective, with Iran spending around $30,000 on their missiles and NATO/Israel wasting roughly $140 million trying to intercept them.

Iran mainly targeted an Israeli spy base in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights (in Syria), Tel Aviv and Israel’s Nevatim airbase, home to the Israeli plane that bombed Iran’s Damascus embassy.

They fired cruise missiles, Shahed 1369 drones (the type Russians use to strike targets in Ukraine), armed suicide drones (both with a 2,000 km range) and some 1700 km range armed Qiam and Shahed drones specifically aimed at Israel’s defensive system.

Their only goal was penetrating Israeli (and supporters) missile systems, rather than inflicting serious damage.

They achieved both goals. The 72 hour warning caused massive panic buying among Israeli citizens, and at least a third of Iran’s missiles penetrated Israel’s missile defensive system.

What to Make of Trump’s Mixed Messages

Trump swears in special envoy to the Middle East, talks hostages, Iran ...Ted Snider

In negotiations over wars in areas all over the globe, the Trump administration has been sending inconsistent messages. At times, the statements from the White House are so mixed that it is no longer clear what message the President is trying to send.

Soon after Vice President JD Vance said that the U.S. would not intervene and broker a ceasefire between India and Pakistan, President Trump claimed credit for brokering a truce between India and Pakistan.

“What we can do is try to encourage these folks to de-escalate a little bit, but we’re not going to get involved in the middle of war that’s fundamentally none of our business and has nothing to do with America’s ability to control it,” Vance said.

In the next two days, Vance would call Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio would be on the phone with officials in India and Pakistan.

President Donald Trump would then post, “After a long night of talks mediated by the United States, I am pleased to announce that India and Pakistan have agreed to a FULL AND IMMEDIATE CEASEFIRE.”

Despite claiming all the credit, the U.S. did not act alone. The Trump administration’s primary involvement was to get the two sides talking, though talks between India and Pakistan were really already taking place behind the scenes. The U.S. was not involved in helping to draft the actual agreement.

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif credited the United States, saying, “We thank President Trump for his leadership and proactive role for peace in the region.” India has not only not thanked the United States, but they are, reportedly, furious with them. Trump’s announcement caught India by surprise. It preempted India’s announcement that India and Pakistan had spoken for hours and agreed to a ceasefire, and it undermined Modi’s policy that the Kashmir dispute would be resolved through bilateral talks between India and Pakistan. India has downplayed the U.S. role.

On April 22, Trump completed a phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, saying that the two “are on the same side of every issue.” He then acted very differently.

On May 6, Trump announced that the U.S. would stop its attacks on Yemen since the Houthis had agreed to stop attacking American ships in the Red Sea. He did not mention if the Houthis would cease their attacks on Israel, and the Houthis made it clear that they would not. According to a senior Israeli official, Israel was not notified of the agreement by the U.S. and was caught by surprise. “We were completely shocked. Israel was not informed before Trump made the statement,” one Israeli official said.

Two days later, the U.S. announced that discussions with Saudi Arabia over cooperation on a Saudi civilian nuclear program that had previously been linked to Saudi Arabia normalizing relations with Israel were no longer linked.

Then, on May 9, a report emerged that the White House was pressing Israel to agree to a ceasefire or be “left alone.”

In Iran, the messaging on the nuclear negotiations became so mixed that it was no longer clear what Washington is demanding from Tehran.

Iran has been clear that negotiations are limited to verifiable limits on its peaceful, civilian nuclear program. Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has fully empowered his team to negotiate, but he has placed a firm limit that Iran will not negotiate “the full dismantling of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure.”

Trump has consistently described the meetings the same way: “You know, it’s not a complicated formula. Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon.” Members of his team, though, have not been as consistent. Then National Security Advisor Mike Waltz said that the U.S. is demanding “full dismantlement,” and Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff said that “a Trump deal” means “Iran must stop and eliminate its nuclear enrichment and weaponization program.” Rubio said that Iran can have a civilian nuclear program, but by importing uranium enriched up to 3.67 percent and no longer by enriching their own.

The message became truly convoluted when Trump told Meet the Press that the only concession from Iran he would accept was “total dismantlement.” Then, mixing the message even more, speaking in the Oval Office, Trump appeared to walk back that demand, saying, “We haven’t made that decision yet.”

The messaging in the Ukraine-Russia conflict is no less mixed. The Trump team recently presented a “final offer,” not on a 30-day ceasefire, but on a full-blown peace plan. When Ukraine signalled that they wanted the next meeting to continue to focus only on a 30-day ceasefire, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Steve Witkoff pulled out of the talks.

Trump officials continued to signal a shift from focusing on a 30-day ceasefire to longer-term negotiations. In May, Vance said, “It’s not going to end any time soon…. We got ‘em talkin’. We got ‘em offering peace proposals.” Days later, he said, “The next big step we’d like to take” is having “the Russians and the Ukrainians… actually agree on some basic guidelines for sitting down and talking to one another.”

Then, the administration seemed to pivot again with Trump posting that “The U.S. calls for, ideally, a 30-day unconditional ceasefire,” and that “If the ceasefire is not respected, the U.S. and its partners will impose further sanctions.”

The mixed messaging has left negotiations in a certain amount of confusion. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky believes he is accepting Trump’s demands by agreeing to a 30-day ceasefire; Russian President Vladimir Putin thinks he is accepting Trump’s demands by offering to “resume direct negotiations” in Istanbul.

Sticking with the competing formulation, Zelensky is reportedly “open to direct talks with Russia… but only if Moscow signs up to an unconditional ceasefire first.” Trump responded with the demand that “President Putin of Russia doesn’t want to have a Cease Fire Agreement with Ukraine, but rather wants to meet on Thursday, in Turkey, to negotiate a possible end to the BLOODBATH. Ukraine should agree to this, IMMEDIATELY.”

In conflict negotiations around the world, the Trump administration has offered mixed messaging that has led to confusion about the terms of negotiations and about which party is rejecting those terms. Time will tell if the messaging is symptomatic of confusion in the Trump administration or if it is part of Trump’s negotiating strategy.

[…]

Via https://original.antiwar.com/Ted_Snider/2025/05/12/what-to-make-of-trumps-mixed-messages/

Trump to control Syria by sanctions waivers and could protect Syrian Kurds against Turkish/ Damascus/ISIS/ SNA / Irani and Israeli enemies

thefreeonline

In a surprise move Trump declared an «end» to the Sanctions throttling Syria, thus taking power of ‘instant reinstatement’ over ‘interim’ ruling ex Al Qaeda terrorists. Reversing the pullout of US bases he also quietly ordered air and logistic support to the Kurdish led SDF battling Turkish led and ISIS attacks

SDF confirms ongoing ‘Coalition partnership’ in Northeast Syria

DAMASCUS, Syria (North Press) – https://npasyria.com/en/125557/– The commander of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) confirmed on Thursday that cooperation between the SDF and the U.S.-led Global Coalition remains active and effective.

Mahmoud Habib, spokesman for the North Democratic Brigade operating under the SDF umbrella, highlighted joint operations carried out against ISIS sleeper cells over the past two days.


In a statement posted on his official Facebook account, Habib noted that both parties have conducted day and night training exercises aimed at enhancing operational and field capabilities.He also reported the establishment of new positions, including in the town of Sirrin, with further deployment planned soon in the Tishrin Dam housing area in southern Kobani.

Habib emphasized that additional military and logistical reinforcements have been sent to support Coalition bases in northern Syria, rejecting reports of an imminent U.S. withdrawal as “baseless illusions.”

On May 3, a source from the Global Coalition told North Press that the U.S.-led forces are conducting their largest military exercises in Syria to date, starting from their bases in the country’s east.

According to the source, the drills are being carried out from the al-Omar oil field base and its surrounding areas in the east of Deir ez-Zor, extending to the Iraqi border.

The source described the upcoming maneuvers as the most extensive since Coalition forces first entered Syria, signaling the start of a new phase of operations against what he termed “malicious organizations.”

By Khalaf Ma’o https://npasyria.com/en/125557/

US sanctions/Tariffs Hegemony wins partial control of HTS led regime in Syria thefreeonline at https://wp.me/pIJl9-GWi

“This will likely be the final end of the Syrian «revolution» with the devastated country parceled out to neoliberal profiteers funded by oil dictators and western corporations.

However it does open the option of the coercive ‘Trump Deal’ ordering an end to the regime permitting mass sectarian massacres, especially of Kurdish, Druze and Alawite minorities.

US coercive control of the economy via sanctions ‘instant renewal’ could in principle curb the ‘bad for business’ persecution of Kurds, Christians, Azeris, Syriacs, ex Assad era workers, LGBTQs… as well as the moves to return women, over half the population, to Al Qaeda/ISIS style servitude.

Sanctions lifting could also be good news for the embattled AANES/SDF area of NE Syria. It seems the US has reversed its policy of partial withdrawal from its bases there which, though only a few thousand troops, maintain Air and Logistical protection against the social revolution’s many sworn enemies.

Latest reports suggest the US has also modified its ‘look the other way’ policy and is now actively resisting Turkey’s genocidal invasions and terrorist attacks, despite it being a NATO partner.

Such reports point to a US deal to enforce a ceasefire in Manbij to curb the killings and looting by Turkish backed SNA mercenaries, as well as the quiet installation of a US post in Kobani to thwart the Turkish backed offensive to destroy the iconic Kurdish city as well as the deal to stop the Turkish sponsored bombing and killing of civilian protestors at the Tishrin Dam.”

North Press also reported that the SDF spokesperson Mahmoud Habib has confirmed the establishment of new US positions, including in the town of Sirrin’s Turkish backed massacre, with further deployment planned soon in the Tishrin Dam housing area in southern Kobani.
As the Turkish state continues its genocidal campaign against North-East Syria, which has escalated since the fall of the Assad regime, targeted attacks against civilians have left dozens of people dead or wounded in recent weeks. On January 28, a Turkish UCAV (unmanned combat aerial vehicle) bombed the public market in Sirrin, leaving 12 civilians dead and 13 others wounded. 

The Rojava (AANES/SDF) revolutionary example of multi-ethnic local administration and defense, for gender equality, environmental sustainability, and economic governance including communes is an obvious though much hated template for pacifying the current chaotic mess under the new Syrian rulers .

The SDF 80,000+ decentralised coalition of dozens of Kurdish led local, minority, women’s and anti -jihadi, militias are paid by the Autonomous Administration (NOT by the US).

Moves to disband the SDF by integration into the new Damascus state army have been accepted in principle, but the appointment by Jolani of a US condemned HTS war criminal as ‘commander’ to take control of Rojava has raised outraged resistance. The plan to disband may be delayed and reformed indefinitely. See Outrage as Hevrin Khalaf’s killer made Army Leader to destroy Rojava -‘securing the provinces of Hasakah, Raqqa, and Deir Ezzor’-. – The Free )

[…]

Similarly the Trump Sanction Deal and reported reversal of withdrawal from bases raises questions on other concessions by AANES/SDF to the HTS-led ‘interim’ government in Damascus. For example the agreement to withdraw the SDF from the key Tishrin dam defense as SNA Turkish mercenaries in theory come under HTS control.

[…]

Via https://thefreeonline.com/2025/05/14/trump-to-control-syria-by-sanctions-waivers-and-protect-syrian-kurds-against-turkish-damascus-isis-sna-irani-and-israeli-enemies/

Witkoff said to present new plan to free all hostage and remove Hamas from power

White House special envoy Steve Witkoff speaks with journalists after a signing ceremony between President Donald Trump and Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani at the Amiri Diwan in Doha, Qatar, May 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

White House special envoy Steve Witkoff speaks with journalists after a signing ceremony between President Donald Trump and Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani at the Amiri Diwan in Doha, Qatar, May 14, 2025. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

By Nava Freiberg

US President Donald Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, has laid out a new plan during hostage negotiations in Doha for a deal to release all the hostages in Gaza and remove Hamas from power in the Gaza Strip, according to a Channel 12 news report.

While mediators have expressed support for the plan, and Hamas has “sent positive signals,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is insisting on a limited deal that does not require Israel to end its military campaign in Gaza, says the report.

“The Americans have an attitude of ‘take it or leave it,’ or we’re gone. They are determined that whoever doesn’t go with them will lose a lot,” a senior Israeli official aware of the discussions told Channel 12.

In recordings aired this evening by the network, Witkoff is heard telling the hostages’ families yesterday in Tel Aviv that, “Statistically, many more hostages than not have come out through diplomatic means, that’s what’s really worked. The Israeli military has had success, they have, but more often than not, dialogue and diplomacy have really worked here.”

Meanwhile, members of the Israeli security cabinet told Channel 12 today that “this cabinet approved [Israel’s planned expanded Gaza ground invasion] in the case that Hamas does not agree to release additional hostages in the [original] Witkoff framework. The prime minister will be judged by us based on how firmly he stands up to the pressure from Trump.”

The original Witkoff framework would see a temporary ceasefire of some 40 days, in exchange for about half of the remaining living hostages.

[…]

Via https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog_entry/witkoff-said-to-present-new-plan-to-free-all-the-hostages-remove-hamas-from-power/

Saudi FM: US, Saudi Arabia ‘Agree to End Gaza War, Release All Hostages’

Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan al-Saud attends the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) in Riyadh on May 14, 2025. (Fayez NURELDINE / AFP)

Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan al-Saud attends the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) in Riyadh on May 14, 2025. (Fayez NURELDINE / AFP)

Today

Speaking to journalists after the Gulf summit, Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud says that the US and Saudi Arabia “agree to end the war in Gaza and release all hostages.”

He says the US administration is willing to make “very courageous decisions” to push toward a ceasefire in Gaza, and “open up pathways to resolving the broader issues of Palestine,” including “moving toward, one hopes, a Palestinian state,” according to a New York Times report.

The US did not issue a similar statement in regards to any agreements reached with the Saudis about the war in Gaza.

Al-Saud also says, “We need to reach a ceasefire in Gaza as soon as possible,” adding that “without a ceasefire in Gaza, it would be difficult to supply aid” to the enclave.

He also adds that Saudi Arabia “fully supports the US-Iran nuclear talks,” adding that he “hopes for positive results.”

Additionally, he says that the Saudis and the Gulf states “will be the first supporters” of a Syrian “economic renaissance.”

“We want to see Syria build a sustainable economy and build self-sufficiency,” he says. “That all needs a push, and that push will come from its friends in the region and beyond.”

[…]

Via https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog_entry/saudi-fm-us-saudi-arabia-agree-to-end-gaza-war-release-all-hostages/

Digital Prison in the Making: Wikileaks Blasts Palantir for Digital Spying & Gaza Massacre

An Artificial Intelligence's Interpretation of Police Using Artificial Intelligence to Predict Crime. Created by Midjourney AI v5, October 3, 2023 - Sputnik International, 1920, 14.05.2025
Ekatarina Blinova
The CIA-linked military tech firm thrives under Donald Trump, despite dark controversies. WikiLeaks has outlined a string of warnings about Palantir’s ties to spying, possible war crimes, and human rights abuses.

Gaza Killware

Palantir provided an AI-powered targeting tools to Israeli forces that they used in deadly strikes on civilians and aid workers in Gaza, according to The Nation.

Left off the WikiLeaks List? Palantir’s Ukraine AI War Lab

Time reported that Palantir turned Ukraine into an “AI war lab” in June 2022, offering its services for free.

In February 2023, CEO Alex Karp bragged that Palantir was responsible for “most of the targeting” by Ukrainian forces — whose military has a record of striking residential areas and civilian infrastructure.

Predictive Policing & EU Privacy Violations

In 2020, Dutch privacy group SOMI demanded a probe into Palantir’s secretive work with EU police and spy agencies, including Europol and German state police.

SOMI accused Palantir of abusing civilian data and pushing “predictive policing” that undermines the presumption of innocence.

The Verge revealed that between 2012–2018, Palantir ran covert predictive policing programs in New Orleans—without public consent.

ICE Deportations & Family Separation

Palantir’s software has been used by the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for workplace raids, deportations, and family separations, according to Vice and The Intercept.

The Intercept also reported in 2017 that Palantir tools allowed ICE to track US citizens using biometric data and access classified intelligence — even from the CIA.

Branding WikiLeaks a “Threat”

WikiLeaks shared what appears to be a 2011 Palantir white paper that explicitly labeled the organization a “threat.”

The document suggests Palantir was keeping surveillance on WikiLeaks’ servers, its founder Julian Assange, and staff members.

It also indicated Palantir’s intent to “capitalize” on WikiLeaks’ vulnerabilities and “combat” the group.

[…]

SpaceX Wants to Increase Launches at Boca Chica Without a Full Environmental Review

Image by Sven Piper.

On April 20, 2023, SpaceX’s Starship—the largest and most powerful rocket ever built—exploded just four minutes after liftoff from its Boca Chica spaceport in Texas. While CEO Elon Musk touted the mission as a success for clearing the launch pad, the environmental and community fallout painted a different picture. Scorched wetlands, debris scattered for miles, and fire damage underscored the risks of high-stakes experiments in a region rich with biodiversity and human history. Now, SpaceX seeks approval from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to increase its Starship launch frequency or “cadence” to 25 times per year—potentially 75 events annually when accounting for booster and spacecraft recovery attempts—all without completing the rigorous Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) required by law for projects of this magnitude. Instead the FAA only requires a weaker form of environmental review, an Environmental Assessments (EA).

Although Musk has accused the FAA of regulatory overreach and declared on Twitter that “humanity will never get to Mars” under such constraints, the reality is that the FAA has granted him every Starship license for he has sought at Boca Chica, never once requiring a full EIS. Now, as the Trump-appointed head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), Musk has the power to push anti-regulation initiatives like Project 2025, which seek to dismantle critical environmental protections. Without swift action to demand accountability, Boca Chica could become not just a testing ground, but a sacrifice zone for Musk’s megalomaniacal pursuit of a world where neither people nor the planet stand in his way. Unless his plans are stopped or slowed, communities, ecosystems, and taxpayers will bear the cost of his unchecked ambitions. Submitting testimony during the FAA’s public comment period is an important way to hold Musk and SpaceX accountable and demand a thorough environmental review with an EIS.

Boca Chica: A Community Under Siege

Boca Chica is far more than a launch site; it is a vital ecosystem and home to diverse communities. The region includes the Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge, wetlands and endangered species such as the Kemp’s Ridley sea turtle and piping plover. It is also sacred land for the Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe, whose members have opposed SpaceX’s industrial encroachment on their ancestral lands. The Tigua Tribe, also known as the Ysleta del Sur Pueblo, has argued that the development of the SpaceX launch site at Boca Chica Beach has disrupted their traditional ceremonial practices, which include the use of the beach for sacred rites, thereby violating their First Amendment-protected religious practices. Advocacy groups like Save RGV and the Center for Biological Diversity have stepped forward to challenge SpaceX’s operations, highlighting the disproportionate burden borne by the local environment and residents. Both organizations have filed lawsuits demanding the FAA require a full EIS for SpaceX’s activities at Boca Chica. Save RGV has highlighted violations such as discharging untreated industrial wastewater into surrounding wetlands, while the Center for Biological Diversity’s lawsuit argues that the FAA has violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) by allowing SpaceX to operate under insufficient EAs. Ironically, SpaceX is required to do a full EIS for Starship operations at Kennedy Space Center (KSC) under the U.S. Space Force due to stricter regulations. Yet Boca Chica, with its more fragile ecosystem, is left without the same level of scrutiny. The people of Boca Chica deserve the same protections and oversight as those at KSC.

For local residents, the impact of SpaceX’s operations is impossible to ignore. Frequent road closures disrupt daily life and block access to public beaches. Loud rocket tests and sonic booms disturb both human and wildlife populations, and the April 2023 explosion left debris scattered across miles of sensitive habitat. Meanwhile, Indigenous and local voices remain sidelined in regulatory decisions. The FAA has failed to adequately consult with communities, treating them as collateral damage in Musk’s ambitious pursuit of Mars.

According to a recent NPR story, the situation has worsened due to SpaceX’s wastewater discharges. The company has been found to have violated the Clean Water Act, with both the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) levying fines totaling over $150,000. Environmentalists, including local group Save RGV, have pointed out that this disregard for environmental regulations highlights the urgent need for a more comprehensive review of SpaceX’s impact on the region. Local activist Joyce Hamilton stated, “This is potentially really damaging,” emphasizing the significant environmental consequences of SpaceX’s unchecked operations.

Environmental Risks Ignored by the FAA

Although the FAA did complete an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the SpaceX Starbase in 2014, it was only for Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets—much smaller and less complex systems. Since then, SpaceX’s operations have expanded dramatically to include the much larger and more powerful Starship/Super Heavy launch system. The FAA has relied on a Programmatic Environmental Assessment (PEA) and tiered reviews, rather than conducting a full EIS specific to Starship operations. While the FAA completed a full EIS for Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy launches at Cape Canaveral in Florida, it has failed to apply the same standard to Starship’s vastly more powerful and experimental operations in Texas. The two systems are not comparable: Starship’s unique size, power, and planned recovery operations—along with its location in sensitive wetlands near endangered species—demand a new, comprehensive review. The FAA’s reliance on outdated assessments is grossly inadequate and leaves the area unprotected from significant, unexamined risks.

The environmental risks of SpaceX’s operations extend far beyond Boca Chica. The FAA has also permitted SpaceX to blow up Starship in the Indian Ocean, the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California, and north of Hawaii. Even in cases where the spacecraft are intended for “soft” landings in the ocean, the explosive charge used to destroy the spacecraft results in significant pollution, including harmful chemicals like rocket fuel residues, other contaminants, and debris that can endanger marine ecosystems. In the Pacific near Hawaii, it is dangerously close to the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that is considered sacred to Native Hawaiians. Despite its cultural and ecological significance, no cultural consultation has been conducted for permission to land or conduct operations near this sacred site. The monument is one of the largest marine protected areas in the world, home to over 7,000 species, many of which are endangered. The contamination of these waters from SpaceX’s operations further threatens the delicate biodiversity of this pristine marine environment. These crash landing sites are also in the direct path of humpback whale migration, potentially endangering their migratory patterns and jeopardizing their fragile populations.

In April 2023, SpaceX’s experimental launch license included a plan for Starship to crash into the Pacific Ocean just 62 miles north of Kauai. The EA claimed that fewer than one marine mammal would be harmed during the explosion, despite the spacecraft’s 100-metric-ton mass and the force of 14 tons of rocket fuel detonating on impact. The FAA’s “Finding of No Significant Impact” or FONSI ignored the area’s cultural significance and failed to consult with Hawaiian residents or agencies such as the Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA), which co-manages the marine sanctuary. Local experts raised concerns that even minor deviations from SpaceX’s “nominal” trajectory could cause debris fields to drift into the protected waters of Papahānaumokuākea.

Why the Current Reviews for Starship Are Totally Outdated and Inaccessible

Right now, SpaceX’s licenses for launching Starship at Boca Chica are based on a 2022 PEA. But here’s the catch: that review relies on the even older EIS from 2014 which wasn’t written for Starship at all—it was written for SpaceX’s Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy rockets, which are much smaller and much less complicated. In fact, Starship isn’t even mentioned in the 2014 EIS.

The problem is simple: Starship is nearly twice the size of Falcon 9, ten times heavier, and far more powerful, with untested systems like mid-air recovery and deluge cooling that bring entirely new risks. While the 2014 EIS assumed far fewer launches, SpaceX now proposes up to 25 per year, with vastly greater environmental damage and disruption. The FAA’s reliance on this outdated framework ignores these realities and creates a confusing web of layered reviews that fail to provide a clear picture for the public or sufficient protection for local communities and ecosystems. It’s time to stop building on broken foundations and require a full, updated EIS that reflects the true scope of Starship’s operations.

Furthermore, the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) which oversees NEPA have regulatins that include requirements for public participation and clear communication. The current FAA Revised Draft EA spans 75 pages and refers to over a dozen additional technical documents critical to understanding the full scope of SpaceX’s proposed operations. These referenced materials total about 1,200 pages, requiring over 80 hours to read and analyze. Written in dense, jargon-heavy language, the EA and its supporting documents are nearly incomprehensible to the layperson, effectively excluding the public from meaningful participation. NEPA mandates that environmental reviews be accessible and transparent, yet the FAA has failed to provide simplified summaries or plain-language guides. Finding the place to submit comments and testimony is ridiculously complicated. This inaccessibility undermines public input and compliance with NEPA’s core purpose, leaving communities without the tools to adequately challenge or engage with the review process. The FAA must extend the public comment period and provide simpler, more accessible documents so communities can meaningfully engage.

The Hypocrisy of Musk’s Anti-Regulation Stance

Despite Musk’s repeated calls for a smaller government and less regulation, SpaceX’s operations are heavily subsidized by the public, having received over $5 billion in federal funding for projects ranging from national security launches to satellite deployments. On top of this, SpaceX benefits from indemnities under the Commercial Space Launch Act, which caps its liability for catastrophic accidents at $500 million, effectively shifting much of the financial risk to taxpayers. As SpaceX pushes for an accelerated launch cadence, the potential for accidents—and the resulting financial burden on the public—grows. This stark contradiction highlights how Musk’s anti-regulation rhetoric is at odds with the significant taxpayer dollars and protections that sustain his company.

In addition to federal subsidies, SpaceX also benefits from generous incentives provided by the state of Texas and the city of Brownsville. Texas has offered tax breaks, land leases, and infrastructure support to encourage SpaceX’s development of the Boca Chica launch site. Brownsville, a city with one of the lowest median incomes in the U.S., has also provided SpaceX with significant tax exemptions and financial incentives to attract the company to the region. These subsidies not only reduce SpaceX’s operating costs but also shift the financial burden onto Texas taxpayers and the local community. While Musk criticizes government regulation, his company is essentially a recipient of state and local welfare, further illustrating the gap between his public persona and the reality of SpaceX’s reliance on public funds.

If you are funded by the public, you should be regulated by the public. Musk’s calls, as the head of the DOGE to dismantle regulation are dangerously misguided. Those who benefit from public money and protections must be held accountable to the same level of oversight that ensures the safety, health, and well-being of the public they rely on. The people who are regulated should not be in control of deregulation. Its a conflict of interenst.

Musk’s Mars Myth and Planetary Risks

Musk’s plan to make humanity a “multiplanetary species” reflects a childish understanding of the challenges we face on Earth. His rush to colonize Mars, driven by a naive belief that it offers a backup for human survival, overlooks the fact that Mars is a hostile, uninhabitable world that couldn’t sustain a colony without Earth’s support and resources. Using his X platform, Musk is pushing the Mars survival myth to convince the public to fund his childish dream of conquering the “final frontier” of space on the taxpayer dime, all while demanding the dismantling of public agencies that protect people and the planet. Instead of risking Earth’s biosphere for an uncertain future on Mars, we should focus on safeguarding our home planet.

[…]

Via https://www.counterpunch.org/2024/12/12/spacex-wants-to-increase-launches-at-boca-chica-without-a-full-environmental-review/

Bill Gates Unveils New mRNA-Lipid Nanoparticle Jabs for Billions of Cows

Bill Gates unveils new mRNA jabs for cows.

By Sean Adl-Tabatabai

Bill Gates has unveiled new mRNA-lipid nanoparticle jabs for billions of cows, a move that raises red flags about his relentless push for experimental vaccines and their risks. This latest initiative, targeting U.S. dairy cattle amid the spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1, is part of a troubling pattern where Gates-funded research, backed by institutions like the NIH, USDA, and U.S. Department of Energy, prioritizes profit over safety.

The preprint study, which claims the vaccine induces strong immune responses in calves, is yet another example of mRNA technology being rushed into use without thorough scrutiny. As public health experts and veterinarians sound the alarm, Gates’ involvement fuels skepticism about the true motives behind these jabs, questioning whether they’re truly about health or part of a broader, dubious agenda.

Globalbiodefense.com reports: This study provides timely and potentially transformative insights into a potential intervention strategy. The vaccine, adapted from the same platform used in human COVID-19 mRNA vaccines, may help reduce viral spread among cattle and limit the risk of zoonotic transmission.

A Spreading Threat in U.S. Livestock
First identified in U.S. dairy cattle in March 2024, the H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b virus has since been confirmed in over 950 herds across 16 states. While human cases linked to this strain have mostly been mild, a recent fatality underscores the growing concern about mammalian adaptation and the potential for human-to-human transmission.

Detection of the virus in milk and mucosal secretions highlights not only the risk to animal health and food systems but also the potential exposure pathways for humans, especially farm workers and veterinarians.

Vaccine Induces Broad Antibody Responses in Calves
Two intramuscular doses (50 µg and 500 µg) of the H5 mRNA-LNP vaccine triggered strong antibody responses against both the vaccine strain (A/Astrakhan/3212/2020) and the cattle-derived H5N1 virus. Calves receiving the 500 µg dose exhibited significantly higher antibody titers. Antibodies showed hemagglutination inhibition and virus-neutralizing activity against multiple 2.3.4.4b H5N1 strains, including a representative wild bird isolate.

Cellular Immunity: CD8+ T Cell Activation
Vaccination led to expansion of virus-specific CD8+ T cells, especially at the higher dose. These T cells proliferated and produced interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) in response to H5 antigen stimulation. Modest CD4+ and γδ T cell responses were also observed, suggesting a balanced but CD8-dominant cellular profile.

Protective Efficacy: Reduced Viral Shedding After Challenge
To evaluate protection, vaccinated and unvaccinated calves were fed milk from cows experimentally infected with H5N1:

Unvaccinated calves shed high levels of virus in nasal secretions over 5 days post-infection.
Vaccinated calves showed minimal or undetectable viral RNA in nasal swabs, with only one weak detection in the 50 µg group.
Lung and airway samples post-necropsy confirmed significantly lower viral presence in vaccinated animals.
No calves, vaccinated or unvaccinated, exhibited overt clinical symptoms or fever, though viral replication and shedding in controls indicate subclinical infection with transmission potential.

Implications: A Step Toward Livestock Immunization
The successful immunogenicity and partial protection in calves offer early evidence that an mRNA-based H5 vaccine could serve as a viable countermeasure against the spread of H5N1 in cattle populations. This has critical implications:

Zoonotic risk reduction: Limiting virus replication in cattle may lower the chance of new mutations and cross-species transmission to humans.
Pandemic preparedness: Preventing adaptation of H5N1 to mammalian hosts is a key goal for global health security.
Agricultural stability: A livestock vaccine could reduce economic disruptions from culling and trade restrictions.
Next Steps: Trials in Dairy Cows and Longevity Studies
Future work will assess vaccine efficacy in lactating dairy cattle, the primary population affected in the current outbreak. Researchers also plan to determine:

The minimum effective dose for protection.
Duration and memory of immune responses.
Field-level feasibility and cost-effectiveness of vaccine deployment.

[…]

Via https://thepeoplesvoice.tv/bill-gates-unveils-new-mrna-lipid-nanoparticle-jabs-for-billions-of-cows/

DNI Tulsi Gabbard says Biden-era domestic terrorism policy ‘must end,’ calls it an abuse of power

Tulsi Gabbard says Biden administration placed her on 'secret terror ...

John Solomon

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard says the Biden-era mentality of treating conservatives and citizens with dissenting views like domestic terrorists was an “abuse of power,” signaling that a 2021 memo that empowered the FBI to probe Americans for “concerning non-criminal behavior” is no longer operative.

Gabbard told Just the News in a statement Monday that she has ended the domestic terrorism approach of the Biden administration that was used to justify the targeting of conservative Catholics, gun enthusiasts and parents who protested school board policies.

In fact, officials said, domestic terrorism was recently removed as a top threat from the intelligence community’s national threat assessment as a first step in that transition.

Gabbard’s statement came after Just the News reported last week that a June 2021 domestic terrorism policy memo empowered federal agencies like the FBI and Homeland Security Department to open probes on Americans solely if an agent believed they had been involved in “concerning non-criminal behavior.”

You can read that memo her;

Biden lowered the bar for probing U.S. citizens to mere suspicion

The policy, which was shielded from Americans’ view because the document was mostly classified during the Biden years, substantially lowered the decades-long standard that agents opening a probe must have a predicate based on a reasonable factual basis that a crime has been committed.

The FBI and DHS were allowed by Biden to open a probe based on a mere concern and without the behavior having to be criminal in nature.

After Gabbard declassified the memo this spring, legal experts and members of Congress raised serious concerns about the change, warning it threatened Americans’ rights and civil liberties. Gabbard signaled in her statement to Just the News that she shared those concerns.

“Disguised as an attempt to curb ‘domestic terrorism,’ Biden’s plan actually functioned as a partisan playbook on how the Biden Administration would weaponize government and intelligence against everyday Americans whose ‘offense’ was supporting President Trump, or daring to disagree with or oppose their policies,” the Trump administration’s top intelligence official said.

“To ensure transparency and accountability, I declassified and released the document, so Americans could see the truth about the Biden Administration’s weaponization and politicization of our government against Americans. This abuse of power that violates our God-given freedoms and civil liberties must end,” Gabbard added.

Officials confirmed the Trump administration has abandoned the tactics enumerated in the 2021 memo crafted by the Biden National Security Council,

“The last administration appeared more focused on investigating Americans for their opinions than addressing actual criminal activity,” the FBI said in a statement from a spokesman. “Under new leadership, the Bureau is actively reviewing and revising its guidance to ensure our efforts are focused where they belong: on making America safe.”

The directives provided to the Justice Department and FBI under President Joe Biden by the National Security Council said the agencies should “drive…executive and legislative action” to ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, rein in “ghost guns,” monitor active-duty service members for possible terrorism recruitment and “mitigate xenophobia and bias.”

The Biden policy also included a plan to counter “xenophobic disinformation” as a basis for investigation by creating the “Disinformation Governance Board” program under DHS that was discontinued in 2022, after being widely criticized as an ersatz “Ministry of Truth” established in the name of national security. Nina Jankowicz, selected to head the board, was widely mocked before the board was disbanded.

Sen. Johnson reminds voters that “elections have consequences”

For decades, FBI agents have been required to meet stringent requirements for opening criminal and national security investigations, known as a “predicate.” Before Biden’s term, the predicate for a full investigation required “an articulable factual basis” that “reasonably indicates” a crime or national security threat has or is about to occur, according to the Attorney General’s Guidelines for Domestic FBI Operations.

Lawmakers expressed disbelief that such a change impacting civil liberties was made by Gabbard with so little notice, praising President Donald Trump and Gabbard for declassifying and releasing the memo.

“It’s not surprising. But you’re right. It is shocking,” Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., the chairman of the powerful Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, told Just the News. Paraphrasing former President Barack Obama, Johnson said, “And again, elections have consequences, and in this case, it’s a very good consequence that now this is coming to light.

“I appreciate Tulsi Gabbard looking up exactly what happened and releasing this information. It’s important the American public understands what government does to it, how it tramples on our constitutional rights,” he added.

[…]

Via https://justthenews.com/accountability/political-ethics/tuetulsi-gabbard-says-biden-era-domestic-terrorism-policy-must-end

Virginia passes law to limit time teens spend on social media to one hour a day

Virginia passes law to limit time teens spend on social media to one ...

RICHMOND, Va. — Virginia teens under 16 will soon face limits on their social media usage after Governor Glenn Youngkin signed new legislation into law.

The law requires social media companies to set default time limits of one hour per day for users under 16 years old, with parents having the ability to adjust that time up or down.

“It’s a good first start, and it’s a good way for parents to be able to have better control over how much social media their kids are on,” said Sen. Schuyler VanValkenburg (D – Henrico), who co-sponsored the legislation.

VanValkenburg, who teaches in Henrico County schools, has witnessed the impact of excessive social media use firsthand.

“You see how much it hinders their ability to do well in school, and you see how much it hinders their socialization with their friends,” VanValkenburg said.

He said among the social media platforms that would be subjected to the legislation include Facebook, Instagram, Twitter/X, TikTok, Snapchat, Reddit, Pinterest, and YouTube.

It would not apply to platforms that only provide email or direct messaging services.

The legislation underwent several changes during the legislative process.

It initially contained language that would have banned addictive feeds for anyone under 18, but that version was rejected in the Virginia House of Delegates.

VanValkenburg noted that the revised approach gained support from major social media companies like Meta.

“What is contained in the bill actually mimics a significant amount of what we already have for our teen accounts in Instagram,” Meta lobbyist Patrick Cushing said during a Feb. 17, 2025 hearing on the bill. “So, Instagram has already moved to this type of restriction and so this codifies that plus some.”

Youngkin attempted to add amendments to raise the age back up to 18 and ban infinite scroll features.

While VanValkenburg said he supported these changes, they were ultimately rejected by lawmakers.

Looking ahead, VanValkenburg indicated that additional restrictions might be considered in the future.

“I think we really need to continue to look at the tools that social media sites use to keep kids on their applications and we also need to make sure that the content that they’re pumping out to kids is appropriate,” he said.

Companies that do not comply with the legislation could be subjected to fines under the Virginia Consumer Protection Act.

The new social media restrictions won’t take effect immediately. The law has a delayed implementation date of January 1, 2026.

[…]

Via https://www.wtvr.com/news/local-news/virginia-social-media-time-limit-law-may-12-2025