Archive for January, 2019

TBR News January 21, 2019

Jan 21 2019 Published by under Uncategorized

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Isaiah 40:3-8 

Washington, D.C. January 21, 2019:”Between the growing realization that Trump is a chronic liar and the spreading rumors in high places that he has been working as a Russian stooge, official Washington is a boiling stew. Trump’s refusal to sign off on the operating bill has thrown thousands out of work, including many law enforcement agents and such important members of the government as air controllers, customs inspectors, FBI agents, DHS employees and tens of thousands more. Trump does not care if they never get paid unless he gets the billion dollar useless wall he promised his rabid right wing supporters. It is obvious what is coming; only the timing is blurred but come it will and not soon enough.”

 

The Table of Contents

  • 815 false claims: The staggering scale of Donald Trump’s pre-midterm dishonesty 20
  • The ‘exhausting’ work of factcheckers who track Trump’s barrage of lies
  • The Science of Abrupt Climate Change: Should we be worried?
  • The CIA Confessions: The Crowley Conversations

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TBR News January 20, 2019

Jan 20 2019 Published by under Uncategorized

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Isaiah 40:3-8 

Washington, D.C. January 20, 2019:”Like the ‘1812 Overture’ that begins with soft flute obbligatos and end with bells and cannon, the growing rumors that Putin’s intelligence services got their hands on a pliable Donald Trump and jobbed him into the Oval Office, are growing in volume. Logic, coupled with bits and pieces of fact, points strongly in that direction. If this is true, Trump is guilty of treason and should be removed from the White House with diligence and dispatch.”

 

The Table of Contents

  • 815 false claims: The staggering scale of Donald Trump’s pre-midterm dishonesty 19
  • Editorial: How Trump works for the Russians
  • The CIA Confessions: The Crowley Conversations
  • Does marijuana use really cause psychotic disorders?

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TBR News January 19, 2019

Jan 19 2019 Published by under Uncategorized

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Isaiah 40:3-8 

Washington, D.C. January 19, 2019:”Metallic sodium, easily available, put into a number 9 geletain capsule along with 00 buckshot is something not to put down a toilet in a tall office building or expensive hotel.

The water will eat through the capsule in time and when it contacts the sodium, it will burst into flame.

Most toilet systems have pockets of methane gas, caused by decaying fecal matter, and methane ignites at once if a flame is present.

And Mucinex, poured into the same toilet system will form thick pockets of goop that blocks the passage of water.

To get at it, or the damage from the sodium, means tearing large holes in walls and ceilings.

Insurance companies will pay out for the first episode but not any that might follow. They only bet on sure things.”

 

The Table of Contents

  • 815 false claims: The staggering scale of Donald Trump’s pre-midterm dishonesty No 18
  • Republicans’ lack of alarm over the shutdown reveals a disturbing truth
  • Trump’s Sex Tape Scandal
  • Russian hooker who had sex with Donald Trump mocks his “tiny penis”
  • Two years in, Donald Trump remains the ‘unprecedented president’
  • The CIA Confessions: The Crowley Conversations
  • Sacred Treasures in the Wrong Hands

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TBR News January 18, 2019

Jan 18 2019 Published by under Uncategorized

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Isaiah 40:3-8 

Washington, D.C. January 18, 2019:”It is only a matter of time before his deeds and misdeeds will crash down upon Donald Trump’s dyed hair and he will follow Richard Nixon into disgrace and private life. Throughout his life, Trump has lied, cheated and gotten others to lie for him over such a long period and with considerable success. But in the end, what is now at the top of the wheel will fall to the bottom. Many books have been written about the assassination of Kennedy and the future holds many more books about the decline and fall of a paper tiger.”

 

 

The Table of Contents

  • 815 false claims: The staggering scale of Donald Trump’s pre-midterm dishonesty No 17
  • President Trump Directed His Attorney Michael Cohen To Lie To Congress About The Moscow Tower Project
  • Trump’s Articles of Impeachment Are Writing Themselves, With Echoes of Richard Nixon Growing Stronger
  • House committees to probe report Trump told lawyer to lie to Congress
  • Trump revealed: The Golden Shower
  • The Vice President’s Men
  • The CIA Confessions: The Crowley Conversations

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TBR News January 17, 2019

Jan 17 2019 Published by under Uncategorized

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Isaiah 40:3-8 

Washington, D.C. January 17, 2019:” Operation Cyclone was the code name given to the CIA program designed to arm, train, and finance the Afghan mujahideen during the Soviet war in Afghanistan, from 1979 to 1989. The program leaned heavily towards supporting militant Islamic groups that were favored by neighboring Pakistan, rather than other, less ideological Afghan resistance groups that had also been fighting the Marxist-oriented Democratic Republic of Afghanistan regime since before the Soviet intervention. The CIA was actively supporting and financing the Islamic brigades, later known as Al Qaeda. In the Pashtun language, the word “Taliban” means “Students”, or graduates of the madrasahs (places of learning or coranic schools) set up by the Wahhabi missions from Saudi Arabia, with the support of the CIA.

Operation Cyclone was one of the longest and most expensive covert CIA operations ever undertaken; funding began with $20–30 million per year in 1980 and rose to $630 million per year in 1987. CIA financial aid to the insurgents within Afghanistan was approved in July 1979, six months before the Soviet invasion, though after the Soviets were already covertly engaged there. Arms were sent to CIA-loyal Afghani rebels only after the formal Soviet invasion.

The Soviet War in Afghanistan was a nine-year conflict involving the Soviet Union, supporting the Marxist-Leninist government of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan against the indigenous Afghan Mujahideen and foreign “Arab–Afghan” volunteers. The mujahideen found military and financial support from a variety of sources including the United States, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom, Pakistan, Egypt, China and other nations. The Afghan war became a proxy war in the broader context of the late Cold War. . On April 14, 1979, the Afghan government requested that the USSR send 15 to 20 helicopters with their crews to Afghanistan, and on June 16, the Soviet government responded and sent a detachment of tanks, BMPs, and crews to guard the government in Kabul and to secure the Bagram and Shindand airfields. In response to this request, an airborne battalion, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel A. Lomakin, arrived at the Bagram Air Base on July 7. They arrived without their combat gear, disguised as technical specialists. They were the personal bodyguards for President Taraki. The paratroopers were directly subordinate to the senior Soviet military advisor and did not interfere in Afghan politics. On July 3, 1979, Carter signed a presidential finding authorizing funding for anticommunist guerrillas in Afghanistanas a part of the Central Intelligence Agency program called Operation Cyclone, led by their elite Special Activities Division, which would later include the massive arming of Afghanistan’s mujahideen.

The initial Soviet deployment of the 40th Army in Afghanistan began on December 24, 1979 under Soviet premier Leonid Brezhnev. The final troop withdrawal started on May 15, 1988, and ended on February 15, 1989 under the last Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. Due to the interminable nature of the war, the conflict in Afghanistan has sometimes been referred to as the “Soviet Union’s Vietnam War”.

President Jimmy Carter insisted that what he termed “Soviet aggression” could not be viewed as an isolated event of limited geographical importance but had to be contested as a potential threat to US influence in the Persian Gulf region. The US was also worried about the USSR gaining access to the Indian Ocean by coming to an arrangement with Pakistan.

On July 3, 1979 ,Carter signed the first directive for secret aid to the opponents of the pro-Soviet regime in Kabul. The aim of US was to drag the Soviet Union into what then US Secretary of State Zbigniew Brzezinski liked to call the “Afghan trap.”

The Afghans were supported by a number of other countries, with the US and Saudi Arabia offering the greatest financial support.

The United States began training insurgents in, and directing propaganda broadcasts into Afghanistan from Pakistan in 1978.Then, in early 1979, U.S. foreign service officers began meeting insurgent leaders to determine their needs After the Soviet deployment, Pakistan’s military ruler General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq started accepting financial aid from the Western powers to aid the mujahideen In 1981, following the election of US President Ronald Reagan, aid for the mujahideen through Zia’s Pakistan significantly increased, mostly due to the efforts of Texas Congressman Charlie Wilson and CIA officer Gust Avrakotos.

US “Paramilitary Officers” from the CIA’s Special Activities Division were instrumental in training, equipping and sometimes leading Mujihadeen forces against the Soviet Army. Although the CIA in general and Charlie Wilson, a Texas Congressman, have received most of the attention, the key architect of this strategy was Michael G. Vickers, a young Paramilitary Officer. Michael Pillsbury, a senior Pentagon official overcame bureaucratic resisistance in 1985-1986 and persuaded President Reagan to provide hundreds of Stinger missiles.

Between December 25, 1979 and February 15, 1989, a total of 620,000[soldiers served with the forces in Afghanistan (though there were only 80,000-104,000 serving at one time): 525,000 in the Army, 90,000 with border troops and other KGB sub-units, 5,000 in independent formations of MVD Internal Troops, and police forces. A further 21,000 personnel were with the Soviet troop contingent over the same period doing various white collar and blue collar jobs.

The total irrecoverable personnel losses of the Soviet Armed Forces, frontier, and internal security troops came to 14,453. Soviet Army formations, units, and HQ elements lost 13,833, KGB sub-units lost 572, MVD formations lost 28, and other ministries and departments lost 20 men. During this period 417 servicemen were missing in action or taken prisoner; 119 of these were later freed, of whom 97 returned to the USSR and 22 went to other countries, the rest were murdered by their captors.

Bin Laden recruited 4,000 volunteers from his own country and developed close relations with the most radical mujahideen leaders. He also worked closely with the CIA, Since September 11, [2001] CIA officials have been claiming they had no direct link to bin Laden.” -Education in Afghanistan in the years preceding the Soviet-Afghan war was largely secular. The US covert education destroyed secular education. The number of CIA sponsored religious schools (madrasahs) increased from 2,500 in 1980 to over 39,000. From the outset of the Soviet Afghan war in 1979, Pakistan under military rule actively supported the Islamic brigades. In close liaison with the CIA, Pakistan’s military intelligence, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), became a powerful organization, a parallel government, wielding tremendous power and influence.

The ISI had a staff composed of military and intelligence officers, bureaucrats, undercover agents and informers, estimated at 150,000. Meanwhile, CIA operations had also reinforced the Pakistani military regime led by General Zia Ul Haq:

“Relations between the CIA and the ISI had grown increasingly warm following [General] Zia’s ouster of Bhutto and the advent of the military regime. During most of the Afghan war, Pakistan was more aggressively anti-Soviet than even the United States. Soon after the Soviet military invaded Afghanistan in 1980, Zia [ul Haq] sent his ISI chief to destabilize the Soviet Central Asian states. The CIA only agreed to this plan in October 1984

The ISI operating virtually as an affiliate of the CIA, played a central role in channeling support to Islamic paramilitary groups in Afghanistan and subsequently in the Muslim republics of the former Soviet Union.

Acting on behalf of the CIA, the ISI was also involved in the recruitment and training of the Mujahideen. In the ten year period from 1982 to 1992, some 35,000 Muslims from 43 Islamic countries were recruited to fight in the Afghan jihad.

The madrassasin Pakistan, financed by Saudi charities, were also set up with US support with a view to “inculcating Islamic values”. “The camps became virtual universities for future Islamic radicalism,” (Ahmed Rashid, The Taliban). Guerilla training under CIA-ISI auspices included targeted assassinations and car bomb attacks.

Weapons’ shipments were sent by the Pakistani army and the ISI to rebel camps in the North West Frontier Province near the Afghanistan border. The military governor of the province was Lieutenant General Fazle Haq, who allowed hundreds of heroin refineries to set up in his province. Harvested gum opium was trucked to a Pakistani Army base and taken over by CIA personnel where it was trans-shipped to Columbia by CIA proprietary aircraft companies.

Beginning around 1982, Pakistani army trucks carrying CIA weapons from Karachi often picked up heroin in Haq’s province and return loaded with heroin. They were protected from police search by ISI papers. During the Reagan administration, Osama, who belonged to the wealthy Saudi Bin Laden family was put in charge of raising money for the Islamic brigades. Numerous charities and foundations were created.

The operation was coordinated by Saudi intelligence, headed by Prince Turki al-Faisal, in close liaison with the CIA. The money derived from the various charities were used to finance the recruitment of Mujahieen volunteers.

Al Qaeda, “The Base” in Arabic, was a CIA-instituted and maintained data bank of volunteers who had enlisted to fight in the Afghan jihad. That data base was initially also controlled by Osama bin Laden. U.S. CIA and U.S. Army counterinsurgency experts worked closely with the Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) in organizing Mujahideen groups and in planning operations inside Afghanistan. But the most important contribution of the U.S. was to bring in men and material from around the Arab world and beyond. The most hardened and ideologically dedicated men were sought on the logic that they would be the best fighters. Advertisements, paid for from CIA funds, were placed in newspapers and newsletters around the world offering inducements and motivations to join the Jihad.

 

The Table of Contents

  • 815 false claims: The staggering scale of Donald Trump’s pre-midterm dishonesty No 16
  • ‘Radicalized’ man planned to storm White House with BAZOOKA, FBI says
  • Trump lawyer Giuliani shifts on collusion, can’t say if campaign tied to Russia
  • Fake editions of The Washington Post handed out at multiple locations in D.C.
  • The CIA Confessions: The Crowley Conversations

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TBR News January 16, 2019

Jan 16 2019 Published by under Uncategorized

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Isaiah 40:3-8 

Washington, D.C. January 16, 2019:” There are questions and there are answers.

When men came down out of their caves and stood on their hind legs, questions began to form in their small minds.

Would they live forever?

Where would they go when they stopped breathing and began to smell bad?

And other men, more clever, told them what they wanted to hear so desperately.

Yes, they would live forever and in a wonderful place.

Yes, they would see their dead family again who would be waiting for them, smiling.

Of course in order to get to this wonderful place and see smiling dead family members they would have to become a paying member of a certain religious group.

They would have to believe just what the leaders of this religious group told them to believe or they would go to some cold, wet and nasty place when they died and have to sleep with dead rats.

And because they wanted to believe these entertaining and entirely invented stories, they did.

Those who promised paradise got rich and those who believed were content. But when they died, they slept with the worms.

Of course they weren’t aware of anything at that point.”

 

 

The Table of Contents

  • 815 false claims: The staggering scale of Donald Trump’s pre-midterm dishonesty No 15
  • Brexit likely to be Britain’s greatest disaster
  • Pelosi asks Trump to delay State of the Union address, or deliver it in writing
  • Factbox: Impact on U.S. government widens on 25th day of shutdown
  • The CIA Confessions: The Crowley Conversations

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TBR News January 15, 2019

Jan 15 2019 Published by under Uncategorized

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Isaiah 40:3-8 

Washington, D.C. January 15, 2019: “’ Cui bono’ is a Latin phrase meaning ‘who benefits?’ In the matter of the accusations at a high level that President Trump worked, works for the Russians, the application of this phrase is quite important.

  • Who benefits from Trump’s tariffs?
  • Who benefits from Trump’s war on Latin Americans?
  • Who benefits from Trump’s harassment of China?
  • Who benefits from Trump’s divisive attacks on sections of the American public?
  • Who benefits from Trump’s very ill-advised and illogical actions in the Middle East?

American interests, economic and social?

No, they not only do not benefit but they are seriously injured and impaired.

Who, then,benefits from these actions?

Why logic and an application of Occam’s Razor show with great clarity that only one

entity benefits and that is Vladimir Putin’s Russia. The recent allegations that Trump worked for the Russians; had been gotten at by them earlier on are the only clear and logical answer to the question ‘cui bono.’

And for the leader of a country to deliberately work against the interests of his country for another is an act of treason and should be treated accordingly.”

The Table of Contents

  • 815 false claims: The staggering scale of Donald Trump’s pre-midterm dishonesty No 14
  • Donald Trump’s Russian Connections
  • The CIA Confessions: The Crowley Conversations

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TBR News January 14, 2019

Jan 14 2019 Published by under Uncategorized

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Isaiah 40:3-8 

Washington, D.C. January 14, 2019: “Donald Trump does not care if thousands of Federal employees, whom his actions have been cut off from income, starve to death as long as he can force his worthless billion dollar wall through Congress. That he cannot is obvious but in Trump’s world, no one ever defies him with impunity. On this occasion many have and he will not yield until he forces them to his will. Perhaps the mythic Jesus will appear in the Oval Office in support of Trump but like the enormous parade Trump demanded, this will never happen.

 

The Table of Contents

  • 815 false claims: The staggering scale of Donald Trump’s pre-midterm dishonesty No 13
  • Senate Republicans feel shutdown pressure as Trump tweets angrily on
  • The CIA Confessions: The Crowley Conversations
  • ‘In God We Trust’ – the bills Christian nationalists hope will ‘protect religious freedom’
  • Jesus: Fact and Fiction
  • It is near; it is at hand. Maybe tomorrow but probably never

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TBR News January 13, 2019

Jan 13 2019 Published by under Uncategorized

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Isaiah 40:3-8 

Washington, D.C. January 13, 2019: “By his hysterical and growing dictatorial behavior to both the organs of government and the public, Trump is in the process of creating havoc in the United States and the end result will echo the Yellow Vest protests now erupting in France. There is every reason to believe that Putin’s intelligence service got at Trump and that much of his behavior can be blamed on his Russian connections. He does not belong in the White House. Leavenworth would be more appropriate.”

 

The Table of Contents

  • 815 false claims: The staggering scale of Donald Trump’s pre-midterm dishonesty No 12
  • The CIA Confessions: The Crowley Conversations
  • Trump fails to answer yes or no when asked if he ever worked for Russia
  • Trump losing battle to avoid blame for shutdown as it enters day 23
  • Trump tweets his fury after bombshell report adds drama to Russia inquiry
  • Violent Round Robin letter to right wing Trump American support groups

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TBR News January 12, 2019

Jan 12 2019 Published by under Uncategorized

The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Isaiah 40:3-8 

Washington, D.C. January 12, 2019:” The reports that Trump had been taken over by Russian intelligence and was operating under their orders are not new and recently information emerged from Russia that confirmed this. It was turned over to competent authority for verification and soon we will be hearing more of this. If one takes all of Trump’s apparently bizarre behavior and studies it, it is obvious that what he has been doing is creating world-wide negativity against the United States as a world power and given his corruption and many visits to Russia, the conclusions are clear.”

 

 

  • 815 false claims: The staggering scale of Donald Trump’s pre-midterm dishonesty No 12
  • FBI reportedly opened inquiry into whether Trump was working for Russia
  • French police brace for ninth ‘yellow vest’ weekend protests
  • The CIA Confessions: The Crowley Conversations
  • RAF veteran ‘admitted 1961 killing of UN secretary general’
  • Hammersköld Assassination background
  • Bitcoin is the greatest scam in history

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