Chile Yesterday, America Today

Chile in Their Hearts: The Untold Story of Two Americans Who Went Missing After the Coup by John Dinges. University of California Press, 2025. 287 pages.

Their fate reminds us of the long-term consequences that permitting lawlessness and lies from a government can have, how those qualities can corrupt the moral compass of officials who, through their inaction and silence, become complicit in the repression. Today, the United States itself veers toward authoritarianism, abrogates civil rights, and persecutes its opponents. An unavoidable question arises: are we that far from turning a tale about Chile yesterday into a story about America today?

~ Full article…

The United Arab Emirates Use a Black Sport to Whitewash a Genocide in Africa

Do any of these players know that the UAE severely curtails speech, imprisons dissidents, and ties a migrant worker’s legal residency and work permit directly to an employer in a system resembling slavery?

Do they know that the UAE criminalizes and severely punishes anyone who manifests as LGBTQ?

Do they know that the UAE funds the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a descendant of the janjaweed, in a proxy war for Sudan’s vast gold reserves and agricultural land?

Do they know that the RSF are responsible for war crimes, ethnic cleansing, and atrocities that many now label as genocide?

Do they know that the RSF are geographically African but Arab-speaking and Arab-identifying forces murdering Africans in Sudan’s Darfur Region?
Using a Black sport to whitewash an African genocide

The cruelest irony of the NBA/Emirates partnership is that they are using a Black sport to whitewash the criminal monarchy’s proxy genocide of Africans.

~ Full article…

US Labs Create Tick Colonies To Study Foreign Highly Pathogenic Disease With 30% Mortality

The White Coat Waste Project uncovered 10 existing USDA contracts to work on mRNA vaccines, including one that is studying Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever (CCHF), a highly pathogenic tick-borne disease with a 10-40% case fatality rate. The research grant is given to the Agricultural Research Service in Manhattan, Kansas, in combination with researchers at the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility (NBAF), which was formerly on Plum Island, where researchers were studying Lyme disease near Lyme, Connecticut, where the first outbreak occurred.

The research involves multiple partner facilities, including UC Davis and Texas Tech, where tick colonies have been established after they have procured the ticks from African countries where the disease is endemic. CCHF has never been found in the United States – it is endemic to Africa, Asia, and some European countries, including southern Russia.
[…]
EcoHealth Alliance, the research organization headed by now debarred Peter Daszak, also received funding from the Department of Defense to research CCHF to “combat weapons of mass destruction.” That grant was $3.7 million and ran from 2020 to 2024. The recently uncovered contract started in 2021 and ends in March of 2026 with an unknown contract amount.

While the EcoHealth Alliance grant to study CCHF mentions the purpose of combating weapons of mass destruction, this ongoing USDA research is said to be conducted for biodefense purposes. Specifically, the goal is to determine the “risk for the establishment of tick host vectors in the United States considering climatic and ecological conditions.” The tick species and the disease are only endemic in the eastern hemisphere.

~ Full article…

A Language of Esoteric Signs: Deciphering Jewish and Masonic Gestures in Viennese Expressionism

Throughout the complicated and often contradictory cultural milieu that shaped turn-of-the-century Vienna—which included Jewish and non-Jewish artistic patrons who were both friends and combatants, Jewish and non-Jewish artists who were supported by these clients, and the rhetoric surrounding the Secession’s goût juif—Kokoschka, Oppenheimer, and Schiele began to include esoteric hand gestures in their various portraits, including self-portraits (see figs. 3–5, 8–10, 13–17). Deciphering the “secret” language of these signs is the primary aim of this study, in which I argue that the three Expressionists were creating images that incorporated Jewish and Masonic hand gestures in order to “speak” a language of exclusivity, and thus modernity. In so doing, meaning was thus visually communicable between themselves and their sitters, as well as to erudite viewers who were cognizant of these historic “gang signs.” This contention suggests, moreover, that Kokoschka, Oppenheimer, and Schiele had developed a niche lexicon of signs by 1910 based on two separate, yet interconnected, concepts: the mysteries encoded in the gestures of the Freemasons; and an awareness that “talking with one’s hands”—as discussed, for example, by the Austrian-Jewish writer Elisabeth Freundlich (1906–2001)—persisted as a cultural stereotype of Jews in fin-de-siècle Vienna.[15] Importantly, the Expressionists laid claim to these Jewish and Masonic gestures at a moment when the search for “greater truths” was key to their avant-garde agendas, and when Kraus—for better or for worse—had already associated the Secession-led art market with a “Jewish taste.”
[…]
The present essay endeavors to specifically demonstrate that each of these artists (though, as I will show, Oppenheimer and Schiele were more prolific in this arena than Kokoschka) worked in tandem to create an expressive language that iconographically referenced two very specific hand gestures. The first drew upon the Jewish symbology of the Nesi’at Kapayim, or “raising of the hands,” which is still enacted today as part of the Aaronic priestly blessing known as the Birkat Kohanim (ברכת כהנים in Hebrew; see fig. 6). During this benediction, a Kohen (or Jewish priest) invokes the Hebrew letter Shin (ש) by forming his or her fingers into the telltale “W” sign (the thumb serves as one side of the letter), thus drawing a visual reference to the Hebraic word for Shaddai, or “God Almighty.” The second gesture—the Masonic upside-down “M” sign, which also resembles the Shin—was historically used by secular and religious Freemasons to show members that they too were part of the secret fraternity (fig. 7). The “M” gesture, in turn, conceivably developed from the Kabbalah—the ancient source of Judaic mysticism and esoteric teachings—given that the origins and “secrets” of Freemasonry were already connected to Judaism by the time the society was officially formed in the eighteenth century.[17]

~ Full article…

The unseen letters to Epstein, Ghislaine and Andrew from the man who published Lolita

I came across them during my research for my biography of the British publisher George Weidenfeld. These letters are not part of the files released by the US Congress or Department of Justice, but were included in Weidenfeld’s private archive.

I was already aware of a connection between Epstein and George Weidenfeld. The Boeing 757 that Epstein used to traffic underage girls to his Caribbean island was nicknamed by the locals as the “Lolita Express”. It was a reference to the novel by Vladimir Nabokov about a professor who minimises the repeated rape and sexual assault of a 12-year-old girl. In 1959, this book, Lolita, was famously published in the UK – overturning a government ban in the process – by George Weidenfeld.

The first letters I found in George’s archives involved Ghislaine Maxwell, who is currently serving 20 years in prison for helping sex offender and billionaire financier Jeffrey Epstein abuse teenage girls.

~ Full article…

The last stand of Hegemony: Venezuela and the New Global Resistance

Under Nicolás Maduro, the hostility hardened further. Washington responded to Venezuela’s internal political crisis with crippling economic sanctions, asset seizures, and diplomatic isolation. The attempt to install Juan Guaidó as a “parallel president” was perhaps the most extravagant intervention of the century—a strategy that collapsed spectacularly as the world refused to accept what became a geopolitical fiction. These episodes are not isolated. They form a continuous arc of confrontation stretching from the late 1990s to the present, an arc that shapes how any potential U.S. military action must be understood today.

In this context, Russia and China have become central actors. Russia’s involvement is direct and strategic. Moscow sees Venezuela as a key outpost in its global contest with U.S. dominance. Over the past decade, it has expanded military cooperation, supplied advanced air-defence systems, trained Venezuelan officers, and signalled repeatedly that it will not allow a rerun of Iraq or Libya on its geopolitical perimeter. In the event of an attack, Russia would not need to deploy troops to meaningfully alter the balance; its intelligence, cyber capabilities, defence technologies and diplomatic weight would dramatically raise the cost of any U.S. assault.

China, though less dramatic in tone, is just as indispensable. Beijing has poured billions into Venezuelan energy, infrastructure, and long-term credit lines. It has consistently rejected sanctions and opposed external interference, grounding its approach in sovereignty and economic stability. If the U.S. attacked, China would respond by ensuring Venezuela’s economic survival: expanding credit lines, buying oil regardless of sanctions, and blocking any Western attempt to legitimise military action at the United Nations. Beijing’s calculus is simple. Allowing a violent overthrow in Venezuela would set a precedent that could later be used against its other partners—and eventually against itself.

But perhaps the most striking change lies not in Eurasia, but in Latin America itself. The region has moved into a new era marked by sovereignty, cooperation, and an instinctive rejection of U.S. militarism. Even countries that disagree with Maduro on ideology or governance oppose any form of foreign military intervention. The era in which Washington could rely on neighbouring states to serve as logistical platforms or political cover is over.

Colombia is the clearest example. Once the centre of U.S. security operations, Colombia under President Gustavo Petro has undergone a profound transformation. Petro has rebuilt relations with Caracas, embraced diplomacy over militarised counterinsurgency, and rejected the U.S.’s punitive drug war model.

~ Full article…

Russia bans Human Rights Watch in widening crackdown on critics

The decision by the Russian prosecutor general’s office is the latest move in a crackdown on Kremlin critics, journalists and activists, which has intensified since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

In a separate statement on Friday, the office said it was opening a case against Russian feminist punk band Pussy Riot that would designate the group as an “extremist” organisation.

Separately, Russia’s Supreme Court designated on Thursday the Anti-Corruption Foundation set up by the late opposition activist Alexey Navalny as a “terrorist” group.

~ Full article…

Leak of Afghan Data in the UK: Whistleblower Reveals Ignored Warnings

The committee announced on Friday, November 28, 2025, that “Person A,” whose identity has not been disclosed, warned British officials after the data breach but was subsequently confronted with an emergency court order prohibiting him from speaking about or confirming the issue in any form.

Person A explained that in 2021, during the fall of Kabul, he participated in assisting former Afghan security personnel and their families, initially in administrative tasks and later in processing cases across a wide network of units.

He said the breach became evident when a family under his care came across sensitive information about themselves on Facebook anonymously.

~ Full article…

Gen Zers have taken on their governments. From around the world, they tell us why.

Gen Zers feel their future is slipping away from them.

They are playing the game of academic achievement, but where are the well-paying jobs they were promised? Meanwhile, as they work two jobs or wake up at 3 a.m. simply to get a good seat in overcrowded university classes, social media offers a steady stream of Instagram-perfect lives – the privileged living in luxury. So Gen Z has used the internet to fight back.

The revolution has come with plentiful brushstrokes of youth, from the use of a gaming platform to organize to the ubiquitous symbol of the movement – a Jolly Roger flag taken from a popular Japanese comic. Some protesters needed their parents’ permission to participate.

Yet what is perhaps most extraordinary about the Gen Z protests worldwide, experts say, is their unprecedented interconnection. A global generation has spawned a global movement.

David Clark of Binghamton University has studied protest movements for years. This is the first time he’s seen so many protests refer to one another. With hashtags, movements are creating chain reactions.

~ Full article…

The US Secretary of War accused the media of incitement

On Friday, the Washington Post newspaper, citing sources familiar with the situation, reported that Hegset ordered “everyone to be killed” during the US strikes on drug traffickers off the coast of Venezuela, and therefore, during the first strike on September 2, the commanders were ordered to launch a second strike to kill the survivors.

~ Link…