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(Repeat broadcast originally aired November 5, 2021) This week on the Global Research News Hour we bring a special program focused on the plight of Julian Assange. We look not only on the details of the recent appeal of the Extradition Trial, we probe his history and background, the role of Wikileaks, and the eventual erasure of journalism manifest in attempts to continue the assault on Assange. Our round of guest speakers include John Shipton, the father of Assange, John Kiriakou, Joe Lauria, Binoy Kampmark, and Megan Sherman with appearances by Stella Moris, Assange's fiancee, and John Pilger.
Director Ben Lawrence's fly-on-the-wall documentary, ITHAKA, weaves together historic archive and intimate behind-the-scenes footage, as it tracks WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's father, John Shipton and Assange's wife Stella MorisĀ as they join forces to advocate for Julian's freedom. We witness Shipton's European odyssey to rally a global network of supporters, advocate to politicians and cautiously step into the media's glare for his son. With Julian facing the possibility of extradition to the US, his family members are confronting the prospect of losing Julian forever to the abyss of the US justice system. The world's most famous political prisoner, Julian Assange, has become an emblem of an international struggle over freedom of journalism, government corruption and unpunished war crimes. In light of Julian's health declining in a British maximum-security prison and the American government pushing for him to face trial in the America, this David-and-Goliath struggle has become deeply personal for John and Stella. Director Ben Lawrence joins us to talk about ITHAKA's timely reminder of the global issues at stake in this case, as well as an insight into the personal toll inflicted by the arduous, often lonely task of fighting for a cause bigger than oneself. For more go to: ithaka.movie
Freddie Sayers meets Stella Moris, lawyer and wife of Julian Assange.The case of Julian Assange, the Wikileaks founder who published huge troves of sensitive government documents and classified military logs, has been going on for over a decade. During that time Assange has been under house arrest, hidden from extradition inside the Ecuadorian embassy in London and since 2019 has been held in Belmarsh prison. During that time, he has married and had two children with a lawyer called Stella Moris. Moris first met Assange as a young lawyer working on his case, but is now a campaigner for his acquittal and an activist for press freedom.Will Assange be remembered as a pioneer of the free internet or as one of its victims? With his extradition case looming, UnHerd's Freddie Sayers met Stella Moris to hear her case for her husband, Julian Assange.Read the Post here: See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Gabriel Shipton is a Film Producer & advocate for his brother Julian Assange; Stella Moris is a lawyer & wife to Julian Assange. In this interview, we discuss the unprecedented State assault on Assange's freedom, the effects on his mental & physical well-being, & the threat to journalism. - - - - On March 15th 2006, US forces dropped from helicopters onto the roof of a house in a village north of Baghdad. The mission was reportedly to intercept a member of al-Qaeda who was visiting the dwelling. The US troops gathered 11 family members in one room, handcuffed them, and shot them all in the head. This included 5 children under 6, one of whom was a 6-month-old baby. US soldiers then called in an airstrike to destroy evidence of their crimes. Iraqi police reported the details of the incident at the time, but the US military refuted these claims, stating a fire-fight with insurgents caused the deaths, and that ā[US forces] take every precaution to keep civilians out of harm's way.ā Their investigations ended, effectively neutering any other external examination of their conduct. This was until 2010 when WikiLeaks released a series of classified US documents on the Afghan War, Iraq War, and cables between the US State Department and its diplomatic missions around the world. One such cable was from a March 2006 investigation of the above incident by the UN, which corroborated the Iraqi police's accusations that a horrific war crime had been committed. WikiLeaks releases in 2010 highlighted hundreds of other unreported civilian deaths at the hands of the US military in both the Afghan and Iraq conflicts, including military coverup of the torture (using drills and acid) and execution of Iraqi detainees by Iraqi authorities. Julian Assange is the only person linked to these incidents who has been punished. In August it will be 10 years since he sought asylum in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. During that time the CIA had planned to kidnap and execute him. Then, 3 years ago Assange was arrested in the embassy and taken to the UK's highest security prison, Belmarsh, where he's still kept. All because he published source material, a journalistic practice acting as a bedrock of democracy. US authorities have indicted Assange, an Australian citizen residing in the UK, using their 1917 espionage act; this has never previously been used against a journalist. The US is seeking to extradite Assange using a 2003 UK-US treaty, which was hurriedly brought into law without oversight as a response to the war on terror. The rights of individuals in the UK are limited by this treaty. To compound issues further, Assange will not benefit from US constitutional rights. The full weight of the US and UK states is being used against Assange. His physical and mental condition is deteriorating. Assange's treatment is being used as a warning to others. Whatever your preconceived ideas are about this case, the implications are chilling: the US is seeking to make journalism a crime, and those they accuse suffer.
āHe represents democracy and freedom at its strongest, and they've put him in prison. It's in everyone's interest that Julian is freed, it's a disgusting injustice that demeans our democracies and has a real effect on our freedoms because it sets a precedent. What they're doing to Julian, they will do, it's not just that they can do, they will do to others, it's a matter of time.āā Stella MorisGabriel Shipton is a Film Producer & advocate for his brother Julian Assange; Stella Moris is a lawyer & wife to Julian Assange. In this interview, we discuss the unprecedented State assault on Assange's freedom, the effects on his mental & physical well-being, & the threat to journalism. - - - - On March 15th 2006, US forces dropped from helicopters onto the roof of a house in a village north of Baghdad. The mission was reportedly to intercept a member of al-Qaeda who was visiting the dwelling. The US troops gathered 11 family members in one room, handcuffed them, and shot them all in the head. This included 5 children under 6, one of whom was a 6-month-old baby. US soldiers then called in an airstrike to destroy evidence of their crimes.Iraqi police reported the details of the incident at the time, but the US military refuted these claims, stating a fire-fight with insurgents caused the deaths, and that ā[US forces] take every precaution to keep civilians out of harm's way.ā Their investigations ended, effectively neutering any other external examination of their conduct.This was until 2010 when WikiLeaks released a series of classified US documents on the Afghan War, Iraq War, and cables between the US State Department and its diplomatic missions around the world. One such cable was from a March 2006 investigation of the above incident by the UN, which corroborated the Iraqi police's accusations that a horrific war crime had been committed.WikiLeaks releases in 2010 highlighted hundreds of other unreported civilian deaths at the hands of the US military in both the Afghan and Iraq conflicts, including military coverup of the torture (using drills and acid) and execution of Iraqi detainees by Iraqi authorities. Julian Assange is the only person linked to these incidents who has been punished. In August it will be 10 years since he sought asylum in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. During that time the CIA had planned to kidnap and execute him. Then, 3 years ago Assange was arrested in the embassy and taken to the UK's highest security prison, Belmarsh, where he's still kept. All because he published source material, a journalistic practice acting as a bedrock of democracy. US authorities have indicted Assange, an Australian citizen residing in the UK, using their 1917 espionage act; this has never previously been used against a journalist. The US is seeking to extradite Assange using a 2003 UK-US treaty, which was hurriedly brought into law without oversight as a response to the war on terror. The rights of individuals in the UK are limited by this treaty. To compound issues further, Assange will not benefit from US constitutional rights. The full weight of the US and UK states is being used against Assange. His physical and mental condition is deteriorating. Assange's treatment is being used as a warning to others. Whatever your preconceived ideas are about this case, the implications are chilling: the US is seeking to make journalism a crime, and those they accuse suffer.- - - - This episode's sponsors:Gemini - Buy Bitcoin instantlyBlockFi - The future of Bitcoin financial servicesBitcasino - The Future of Gaming is herePacific Bitcoin - Bitcoināonly event, Nov 10 & 11, 2022Ledger - State of the art Bitcoin hardware walletCompass Mining - Bitcoin mining & hostingCake Wallet - Open-source, privacy-focused Bitcoin walletBCB Group - Global digital financial Services-----WBD525 - Show Notes-----If you enjoy The What Bitcoin Did Podcast you can help support the show by doing the following:Become a Patron and get access to shows early or help contributeMake a tip:Bitcoin: 3FiC6w7eb3dkcaNHMAnj39ANTAkv8Ufi2SQR Codes: BitcoinIf you do send a tip then please email me so that I can say thank youSubscribe on iTunes | Spotify | Stitcher | SoundCloud | YouTube | Deezer | TuneIn | RSS FeedLeave a review on iTunesShare the show and episodes with your friends and familySubscribe to the newsletter on my websiteFollow me on Twitter Personal | Twitter Podcast | Instagram | Medium | YouTubeIf you are interested in sponsoring the show, you can read more about that here or please feel free to drop me an email to discuss options.
Il Fatto di domani 6 luglio. Ucraina, gli interessi della ricostruzione (a guerra ancora in corso). "Assange non ĆØ solo": intervista a Stella Moris. Caos aeroporti e vendita di Ita, bagno di sangue per i lavoratori. E le altre notizie che troverete in edicola
Human rights lawyer and wife of Julian Assange, Stella Moris joined Luke Grant and discussed the extradition of Julian. Listen to the highlights from the interview here. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Stella Moris, human rights lawyer and wife of publisher Julian Assange, joins Luke Grant to discuss her husband's extradition from the UK to the US.Ā She gives us a personal update on the situation, and an inside look into what could happen in the future for Julian. Listen to the full interview here. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Stephen Sackur speaks to lawyer Stella Moris, wife of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange and mother of two of his children. The British government is about to decide whether to extradite him to the United States to face espionage charges. With his fate on the line, why is Assange such a polarising figure?
Moscou, rappelle le journal La Croix, « menace de couper le robinetĀ Ā», si bien que l'Europe « se rue sur le gaz amĆ©ricainĀ Ā» et les Ćtats-Unis entendent bien devenir leader mondial en matiĆØre d'exportation de gaz naturel liquĆ©fiĆ©. « Les Ćtats-Unis ont les moyens de leurs ambitions. Leur capacitĆ© d'export est Ć©valuĆ©e Ć 100 millions de tonnes, auxquelles s'ajoutent 186 millions de tonnes de "potentiel dormant" Ā»,Ā dĆ©taille le journal tout en prĆ©cisant que « les Ćtats-Unis manquent pour l'instant de contrats Ć long termeĀ». De son cĆ“tĆ©, L'Opinion Ć©voque les « faiblesses de l'AllemagneĀ Ā» mises Ć jour dans cette crise du gaz avec cette mĆ©taphore de la cigale et la fourmi, la fable de La FontaineĀ : « la Pologne s'est prĆ©parĆ©e au pire. Ignorant les avertissements, la RĆ©publique fĆ©dĆ©rale s'est accrochĆ©e au gaz de Vladimir Poutine (ā¦) Berlin a mĆŖme laissĆ© Gazprom, qui opĆØre un tiers des structures de stockage de gaz en Allemagne, ne les remplir que partiellement avant l'hiver. RĆ©sultatĀ : ces rĆ©serves n'atteignent que 33% des capacitĆ©s. Et l'Allemagne pourrait se trouver fort dĆ©pourvue quand la bise sera venue.Ā Ā» Alors pour s'affranchir du gaz russe, d'autres pays mettent des solutions en place, Ć l'image de l'Estonie et de la Finlande, auxquelsĀ s'intĆ©resse LibĆ©ration avec un reportage sur le port de Paldiski. Un « navire titanesque qui joue le rĆ“le de petit port mĆ©thanierĀ Ā» y sera bientĆ“t visible au largeĀ : « prĆØs de 300 mĆØtres de longueur, une cinquantaine de largeur, cette infrastructure peut stocker (et rĆ©frigĆ©rer) jusqu'Ć 170Ā 000 mĆØtres cubes de gaz liquĆ©fié ». Un projet de taille et des problĆ©matiques qui le sont tout autant car, rappelle LibĆ©ration, « le gaz naturel liquĆ©fiĆ© pourrait ĆŖtre jusqu'Ć deux fois plus polluant que le gaz naturelĀ Ā». LibĆ©rationĀ publieĀ aujourd'hui une vaste enquĆŖte sur Carlos Ghosn Le journal rĆ©vĆØle le contenu de son audition en juin 2021 par un juge du tribunal judiciaire de Nanterre. Et Ā« les enquĆŖteurs soupƧonnent l'existence d'un systĆØme de "corruption"Ā et de "blanchiment en bande organisĆ©e"Ā dont l'Ć©picentre se situerait loin de la France et du Japon, où Renault et Nissan ont leur siĆØge respectif. PrĆ©cisĆ©ment Ć OmanĀ Ā». Carlos Ghosn « aurait ainsi pu se constituer une caisse de quelque 80 millions d'euros grĆ¢ce Ć l'un des distributeurs de Renault-Nissan dans le golfe PersiqueĀ Ā» Le Parti socialiste et le Parti communiste se joindront-ils Ć l'accord conclu entre La France insoumise et Europe Ćcologie Ves Verts « Si prĆØs du butĀ Ā», titreĀ L'HumanitĆ©, qui prĆ©cise que les nĆ©gociations sont toujours en cours. Peut-ĆŖtre pourraient-elles aboutir aujourd'huiĀ : « que le sceau de l'accord intervienne un 3 mai, pour les 86 ans de la victoire du Front populaire ne gĆ¢terait rienĀ Ā», imagine dĆ©jĆ le quotidien. QuelĀ que soit finalement le jour, cet accord « ouvre la possibilitĆ© de dĆ©jouer le scĆ©nario habituel de lĆ©gislatives rĆ©duites Ć une simple formalitĆ© pour le prĆ©sident Ć©luĀ Ā». Lui refuse de s'associer Ć La France insoumise, StĆ©phane Le Foll s'exprime dans les colonnes du Parisien/Aujourd'hui en France. L'ancien ministre socialiste de FranƧois Hollande et maire du Mans estime « qu'une partie de l'Ć©lectorat du PS s'abstiendra ou votera MacronĀ Ā» pour les lĆ©gislatives. Pour Le Figaro, « les mĆ©lenchonistes ont rĆ©ussi Ć faire plier leurs partenairesĀ Ā» mais « la cathĆ©drale de la gauche unie reste encore Ć bĆ¢tir.Ā Ā» et le journal cite deux participants Ć ces discussions qui s'allongent. « Un socialiste rĆ©sumeĀ : "C'est vraiment les montagnes russes."Ā Et une Insoumise conclutĀ : "Vous voyez Baron noirĀ ? C'est la mĆŖme chose, mais fois 100."Ā Ā» JournĆ©e mondiale de laĀ libertĆ© de la presse L'HumanitĆ© donneĀ la parole Ć Stella Moris, l'Ć©pouse et avocate du fondateur de WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, qui risque d'ĆŖtre extradĆ© et condamnĆ© Ć 175 ans de prison. Stella MorisĀ estime que « sa santĆ© dĆ©clineĀ au fur et Ć mesure de ses annĆ©es de prison et de captivitĆ© Ā». Surtout, elle met en gardeĀ : « Anthony Blinken parle de libertĆ© de la presse, de condamner les crimes de guerre en Ukraine. C'est une trĆØs bonne chose. Mais pourquoi extrader et tenter d'envoyer un journaliste en prison pour avoir dĆ©noncĆ© des crimes de guerre en Irak et en AfghanistanĀ ? Ce type de position amĆØne les autres gouvernements Ć faire de mĆŖmeĀ Ā», selon elle. Ćvoquant le sort d'une journaliste ukrainienne assassinĆ©e, Ouest France Ć©voque la propagande menĆ©e par la Russie et rappelle ce credo dans son Ć©ditorialĀ : « La vĆ©ritĆ© vous rendra libre.Ā Ā» Car c'est la libertĆ© qui est menacĆ©e,Ā selon Michel Beuret, dans LibĆ©ration. Responsable Ć©ditorial de la Fondation Hirondelle prĆ©sente dans dixĀ pays d'Afrique et d'Asie, il estime que des contraintes « de plus en plus fortesĀ Ā» pĆØsent sur les professionnels de l'information dans les zones de conflit. Avec une vraie disparitĆ© de situations. Ainsi « il est peut-ĆŖtre plus facile aujourd'hui pour un journaliste de se dĆ©placer en Ukraine qu'au Mali ou au Burkina FasoĀ Ā».
For the last three years John Shipton has campaigned tirelessly across the globe to secure the freedom of his son Julian Assange. Now as Julian enters his third year in maximum security at Belmarsh Prison, his fate is in the hands of the UK Home Secretary who still has the final say on whether Julian should be extradited to the USA to face espionage charges. The last few years of John Shipton and Stella Moris's campaign for Julian's release have been documented in a new film - Ithaka.
Warning: Explicit Conversations About Politics, Culture, & Sexuality Opening up our new Womb Room, celebrating 3 DECADES of lawfully-wedded love and sex-revolutionary marriage from our broadcast bed, Capt'n and I are back in the sack, cranking up the Mattress Madness, even as the Arcadia Politburo Kangaroo Court tries to repress our right to lie down.Ā Hallelujah. Praise the bed! You can do a lot on a bed, even while awake, as we demonstrate on this Bedside Chat, chatting away, showing off our April 12, 1992 Wedding Album, testing equipment, ranting, reminiscing, researching, taking selfies, making out, smoking, drinking, horsing around, reading old diaries, making new jokes, dishing silly celebrities, protesting the war(s), goosing each other, welcoming the anniversary cake, playing with the dog and more making out⦠all in bed! We don't even get to the sleeping part. Though, since we're on the F.D.R. radio Love Train, you could say we're in the Sleeper Car. Choo-choo! Have bed will travel⦠True to our motto of making love first in order to make love lastāfor at least 30 yearsāwe kick off this auspicious anniversary weekend with a little lovemaking, aka sex. It was just *Old People Sex,* so nothing too strenuous, but an essential aspect of keeping lust and trust alive long-term. The older you get, the truer this is. So, have sex first (if you want to make love last), and then, if you feel like it, you can always do it again⦠and again (and yes, we did). Capt'n Max shoots blessed blanks, so no pearl necklacesāat least not the ejaculatory kind. But we're both decked out in oodles of real and fake pearl necklaces, strands, earrings, belly chains and bracelets, pearls of wisdom, purity and pure silliness, the pearl being the sexy symbol of the 30th Wedding Anniversary, the lustrous symbol of lust plus trust, crystalized into a shining little ball of beauty within the 30-year marriage oyster. Besides celebrating our own crazy long marriage, we talk about other people's marriages. We're inspired by newlyweds Julian Assange and Stella Moris, disturbed by Will and Jada (who gives a bad name to good cuckolding!) and even more disturbed by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and MAGAt Coup Queen Ginny Thomas. Though our 30th Anniversary Bedside Chat is tons of fun, our actual anniversary at Le Meridian with its exhibitionism-friendly window plan and awesome mattress takes us right back into the Love Zone. Read more prose and watch the (uncensored) show(s): https://drsusanblock.com/30th-wedding-anniversaryĀ Need to talk? Call our Therapists Without Borders anytime: 213.291.9497. We're here for YOU.
Ā Op 23 maart 2022 trouwden Julian Assange en Stella Moris in Her Majesty's Belmarsh Prison, de zwaarst bewaakte gevangenis in Engeland. Assange zit daar sinds 11 april 2019 opgesloten, in afwachting van twee juridische procedures: een beslissing over zijn uitlevering aan de Verenigde Staten en over de mogelijkheid tegen de Verenigde Staten in hoger beroep te gaan. In Den Haag 'vierden' we het huwelijk tegelijkertijd mee, op steenworp afstand van het Nederlandse ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken, dat zich nog altijd in stilzwijgen hult over de vervolging van deze politieke gevangene. Nederland heeft sinds kort zijn eigen politieke gevangenen. Djamila le Pair constateert dat de (ooit symbolische) leus 'Wij zijn allemaal Assange' nu heel hard werkelijkheid aan het worden is. Hoewel de Engelse overheid er alles aan gedaan heeft het huwelijk zo Spartaans mogelijk te laten verlopen, heeft het bewakingspersoneel, de priester, samen met de gevangenen, Julian Assange en Stella Moris toch een onvergetelijke dag bezorgt. Het tweetal mocht voor het eerst sinds tijden elkaar omhelzen en zoenen, wat gretig schijnt te zijn gebeurd. De bewakersspeelden met de twee zoontjes en hebben foto's gemaakt. Daarvan mag het bruidspaar er twee uitkiezen, met de belofte dat die niet verspreid zullen worden. Ook hoefde Stella niet meteen na de plechtigheid weg. Ze mocht mee naar de bezoekershal en tot het eind van het bezoekuur blijven, maar ze mochten elkaar niet meer aanraden en zaten tussen de andere gevangenen en hun bezoekers. Op de weg terug naar zijn cel schijnt Julian door de gevangenen te zijn toegejuicht onder luid applaus. muzikanten: Robbert Recourt en Wijnand Schippers artikel / links: https://potkaars.nl/blog/2022/3/26/we-are-all-assange-is-heel-hard-aan-het-waarheid-worden-demonstratie-bij-huwelijk-julian-assangeĀ
To support independent media, receive bonus content and to help make this show possible, please join us at: https://www.patreon.com/thekatiehalpershow Rapper and campaigner Lowkey (https://twitter.com/Lowkey0nline) talks about the Israel Lobby's campaign to get Spotify to remove him from their platform. Sign the petition telling Spotify not to cave here (https://www.change.org/p/spotify-do-not-buckle-to-pressure-from-the-israel-lobby-to-deplatform-lowkey?utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=custom_url&recruited_by_id=0ccb39d0-b020-11ec-b015-6f843b977d7f). Lowkey is a British-Iraqi hip hop artist, academic and political campaigner. He is a patron of Stop The War Coalition, Palestine Solidarity Campaign, the Racial Justice Network and The Peace and Justice Project founded by Jeremy Corbyn. He has a Masters in Middle Eastern Studies from SOAS university and is an advisor to the website Declassified which investigates the activities of the Ministry of Defence and British Intelligence Services. He has spoken and performed on platforms from the Oxford Union to the Royal Albert Hall and Glastonbury. His latest album Soundtrack To The Struggle 2 featured Noam Chomsky, Frankie Boyle and Ken Loach and has been streamed millions of times. He produces and hosts his own weekly podcast for Mintpress and has interviewed US Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, Roger Waters, Naom Chomsky, Naomi Klein, Ahed Tamimi, Ken Loach and Stella Moris (wife of Julian Assange). Lowkey has become the target of a coordinated smear campaign to demonize, defame and deplatform him. Earlier this month, organised groups forced the University of Cambridge Palestine Solidarity Society to postpone his lecture and were able to stop his appearance at the National Union of Students in Liverpool. Now, a campaign by lobby group "We Believe in Israel" is demanding that his content be removed from music streaming service Spotify. This is unacceptable censorship. The campaign against Lowkey is designed to silence Palestinians and their supporters. Anti-Palestinian censorship is now reaching into the artistic realm.
I didn't manage to get to England to attend last month's wedding of Julian Assange and Stella Moris, but I've written a song.
Ithaka here II Grabriel Shipton, Julian Assange's brother, talks to us about the new film Ithaka, opening in cinemas on April 21, that follows the very personal journey of John Shipton, Stella Moris and others as they fight the extradition case brought by the US Government in the English Courts.RAHU Response to Just Buy A Home here II Eirene Tsolidis Noyce from the Renters and Housing Union (RAHU) talks up about the PM's callous statement that renters should just buy a home and stop whinging about the ridiculous housing prices, rent hikes and homelessness figures. A PM out of touch just before a Federal Election.This is the Week that Was here II Kevin takes sissors to the weekDon Sutherland on the Budget here II Solidarity Breakfast regular Don Sutherland gives some incisive views on the Budget in relation to wages and reveals the despicable attack on Australian children in the Budget with another massive cut to Public Education for the benefit of more money to Private Education.
Time Runneth Out: Assange Appeal Hearing Rejected. Stella Moris Marries the WikiLeaks Founder. https://assangedefense.org/press-releases/BuyMeACoffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/addyaddsSubstack: https://www.addyadds.substack.comWebsite: https://www.addyadds.one/Telegram: https://www.t.me/oneaddyaddsRokfin: https://rokfin.com/addyaddsCashApp: https://cash.app/$AddyAddsVenmo: HTTPS://VENMO.COM/ADDYADDSPatreon: HTTPS://WWW.PATREON.COM/ADDYADDSTwitter: HTTPS://TWITTER.COM/ONEADDYADDSETHEREUM: 0x18d83c60d3b933960c5ff5Cbb9596f495eBa0d99BITCOIN: 3MNbWXUdjFf9uokVR5ysJ1SovV8FJr8Nqw
Stella Moris, life partner of Julian Assange, will join us to discuss his current status as his extradition trial continues. Ā We'll also be speaking with friend of the show, Rania Khalek of BreakThrough News, about the COP26 Global Climate Summit & much more! Ā Check out our Patreon for more! āļø patreon.com/JENerationalChangeĀ __Ā āļø WEBSITE: jenerationalchange.com āļø TWITTER & INSTAGRAM: @JENFL23 āļø PATREON: patreon.com/JENerationalChange
On the show, Chris Hedges discusses the torture of Julian Assange with his father, John Shipton. Julian Assange committed the empire's greatest sin ā he exposed it as a criminal enterprise. He documented its lies, callous disregard for human life, rampant corruption, and innumerable war crimes. Republican or Democrat, Conservative or Labour, Trump or Biden ā it does not matter. The goons who oversee the empire sing from the same satanic songbook. Empires always kill those who inflict deep and serious wounds. Assange is in precarious physical and psychological health, and suffered a stroke during court video proceedings on October 27. That he has been condemned to death should not come as a surprise. The 10 years he has been detained ā seven in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London and nearly three in high-security Belmarsh Prison ā were accompanied by a lack of sunlight and exercise, as well as unrelenting threats, pressure, anxiety and stress. āHis eyes were out of sync, his right eyelid would not close, his memory was blurry,ā his fiancee Stella Moris said of the stroke. His steady physical and psychological deterioration has led to hallucinations and depression. He takes antidepressant medication and the antipsychotic quetiapine. He has been observed pacing his cell until he collapses, punching himself in the face and banging his head against the wall. He has spent weeks in the medical wing of Belmarsh. Prison authorities found āhalf of a razor bladeā hidden under his socks. He has repeatedly called the suicide hotline run by The Samaritans because he thought about killing himself āhundreds of times a day.ā The executioners have not yet completed their grim work. Toussaint L'Ouverture, who led the Haitian independence movement, the only successful slave revolt in human history, was physically destroyed in the same manner. He was locked by the French in an unheated and cramped prison cell and left to die of exhaustion, malnutrition, apoplexy, pneumonia, and probably tuberculosis. Unless we mobilize to halt this judicial execution, this will be Assange's fate as well.
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Trainiere dein Hƶrverstehen mit den Nachrichten der Deutschen Welle von Freitag ā als Text und als verstƤndlich gesprochene Audio-Datei.BundesprƤsident Steinmeier: Wir sind ein Land BundesprƤsident Frank-Walter Steinmeier hat zum gesellschaftlichen Zusammenhalt in der Corona-Pandemie aufgerufen. In seiner vorab verƶffentlichten Weihnachtsansprache betonte er: "Wir sind ein Land!" Nach zwei Jahren machten sich Frust, Entfremdung und leider auch offene Aggression breit, sagte das Staatsoberhaupt und mahnte zugleich, man müsse sich auch nach der Pandemie noch in die Augen schauen kƶnnen. Mehr denn je seien die Menschen derzeit aufeinander angewiesen. Steinmeier plƤdierte dafür, vor dem Hintergrund der Pandemie über Begriffe wie Vertrauen, Freiheit und Verantwortung neu nachzudenken. Ex-Polizistin in den USA schuldig gesprochen Acht Monate nach dem tƶdlichen Schuss auf einen jungen Afroamerikaner nahe der US-Stadt Minneapolis ist die Ex-Polizistin Kim Potter schuldig gesprochen worden. Eine Geschworenen-Jury befand die 49-JƤhrige des Todschlags ersten und zweiten Grades für schuldig. Potter hatte nach eigenen Angaben im April ihre Dienstwaffe statt wie beabsichtigt ihren Taser (Elektroschocker) abgefeuert und den 20-jƤhrigen Daunte Wright erschossen. Die Staatsanwaltschaft warf der Angeklagten vor, fahrlƤssig und rücksichtslos gehandelt zu haben. Ćber das StrafmaĆ wird voraussichtlich im Februar entschieden. Südkoreas Ex-PrƤsidentin Park wird begnadigt Noch in diesem Jahr soll die wegen Korruption und anderer Verbrechen verurteilte frühere südkoreanische Staatschefin Park Geun Hye aus dem GefƤngnis entlassen werden. In einer ErklƤrung des Justizministeriums heiĆt es, die Begnadigung der 69-JƤhrigen solle dazu betragen, das Land nach den Schwierigkeiten - auch durch die Corona-Pandemie bedingt - wieder zu einen. Parks angeschlagene Gesundheit trug ebenfalls zu dem Straferlass bei. Im Januar noch hatte das Oberste Gericht eine 20-jƤhrige Haftstrafe gegen sie bestƤtigt. Park war die erste PrƤsidentin Südkoreas. Julian Assange ruft Oberstes Gericht GroĆbritanniens an Die AnwƤlte des in GroĆbritannien inhaftierten Wikileaks-Gründers Julian Assange haben Schritte für eine Anrufung des Obersten Gerichts in GroĆbritannien eingeleitet. Damit soll seine drohende Auslieferung an die USA abgewendet werden. Der Supreme Court ist die letzte Berufungsinstanz des Kƶnigreichs. Um ihn anrufen zu kƶnnen, wird allerdings die Zustimmung genau der Richter benƶtigt, die das Auslieferungsverbot Assanges am 10. Dezember aufgehoben hatten, wie Stella Moris, die Verlobte des Inhaftierten, erlƤuterte. Mit einer Entscheidung der unteren Richter wird im Januar gerechnet. Trump zieht im Streit um Kapitol-Erstürmung vor Supreme Court Im Streit um die Herausgabe von Dokumenten an den Untersuchungsausschuss zur Erstürmung des Kapitols hat der ehemalige US-PrƤsident Donald Trump den Obersten Gerichtshof angerufen. Er bat den Supreme Court, die Freigabe der Unterlagen zu blockieren und damit das Urteil eines Berufungsgerichts aufzuheben, wie aus dem Schriftsatz von Trumps AnwƤlten hervorgeht. Trump wird vorgeworfen, den Angriff auf das KongressgebƤude angezettelt zu haben. Radikale Trump-AnhƤnger hatten das Kapitol am 6. Januar gestürmt, als Joe Bidens Wahlsieg zertifiziert werden sollte. Fünf Menschen wurden getƶtet. Schweres FƤhrunglück in Bangladesch Bei einem Feuer auf einer FlussfƤhre in Bangladesch sind mehr als 30 Menschen ums Leben gekommen. Der Brand sei vermutlich im Maschinenraum ausgebrochen und habe sich danach rasch auf dem dreistƶckigen und mit 300 Passagieren vollbesetzten Boot ausgebreitet, berichten Polizei und Feuerwehr. Die FƤhre befand sich zur Zeit des Unglücks mitten auf einem Fluss rund 150 Kilometer südwestlich der Hauptstadt Dhaka. Schlechte Sicherheitsstandards und hƤufige Ćberbelegung sorgen in dem von Flüssen durchzogenen südasiatischen Land mit 170 Millionen Einwohnern immer wieder für tƶdliche Schiffsunglücke.
(Repeat broadcast originally aired November 5, 2021) This week on the Global Research News Hour we bring a special program focused on the plight of Julian Assange. We look not only on the details of the recent appeal of the Extradition Trial, we probe his history and background, the role of Wikileaks, and the eventual erasure of journalism manifest in attempts to continue the assault on Assange. Our round of guest speakers include John Shipton, the father of Assange, John Kiriakou, Joe Lauria, Binoy Kampmark, and Megan Sherman with appearances by Stella Moris, Assange's fiancee, and John Pilger.
Julian Assange's legal team are preparing to fight a High Court ruling that allows his extradition to the United States.
Wikileaks will appeal the decision to allow the Wikileaks founder to face espionage charges. The judges said Washington had offered assurances over his treatment. Also on the programme, more than 50 people have died in a road accident outside the city of Tuxtla Gutierrez in Mexico. Most of them were migrants from Central America. And Taiwan loses another of its diplomatic allies as Nicaragua recognises the People's Republic of China as the legitimate government of all Chinese territory. (Picture: Julian Assange"s partner, Stella Moris, speaks outside the High Court in London Credit: Rain/EPA)
Warning: Explicit Conversations About Politics, Culture, & Sexuality Navigating between the nice and nasty parts of Naughty November in the wild worlds of sex, politics and bonobos, F.D.R. rolls merrily down the tracks, through the Tunnel of Love and into the Great and Quivering Unknown⦠High (and low) points include: --Capt'n Max (still Birthday Boy through Naughty November) lurks under a rock, Scorpio-style, stewing over our lovers' quarrel, then turns into a tiger! But we āmake like bonobos, not baboons,ā and out of the tiger's snarling mouth steps my handsome prime mate, brimming with wit, wisdom and stories galore. --MAGAt Insurrection Fist-Pump Dude Josh Hawley is pumping his little fist at feminism(!) for driving āmanly,ā ammosexual men to porn and video games; so we attack him back, which is easy, because Naughty Hawley's such a posturing sissy (with apologies to sissies), though his misogynistic, anti-porn fascism is not funny at all. This sparks a naughty chat about Nudist Magazines and the Venus of Willendorf. --Joining the anti-porn brigade from the opposing flank, Gwyneth Paltrow and Jada Pinkett-Smith say āporn is harmful to women.ā Not only do they harm sex workers, but what rank hypocrisy coming from Princess Paltrow, born-into-Hollywood-privilege, who's made movies where women are viciously murdered, and Pinkett-Smith, whose tales of her active sex life are click-bait porn.Ā --Christo-fascist, QAnonsense-spewing General Michael Flynn, proclaimed that āone nation under Godā really means āone religion under God,ā and we all know which āone religionā Flynn means: the so-called Christian one where the cross is a sword, and Jesus open-carries an AR-15.Ā --Stop calling Travis Scott's Astroworld horror āSatanicā! Ā If anything, it was Kardashianic. And Kylie-Jenneric. Don't drag Satanāthe Church's *evil* depiction of the great horny, horned, Greco-Roman goat god Pan, Lord of the Wild and patron saint of bonobos (pan paniscus)āinto that awful, human-error-riddled tragedy.Ā --Dave M., who thanked the Therapists Without Borders of the Dr. Susan Block Institute for āsaving [his] lifeā last Saturday, how his other therapists have erroneously labeled his āhypersexuality,ā aka sex addiction (NOT a valid DSM diagnosis). Dave fantasizes that Max and I emerge from Superman's Bizarro World to wage guerrilla war without weapons against anti-sex capitalism, saying āimportant dangerous things,ā though (he imagines) we are āunattackableā⦠which is the most Bizarro part, since we're constantly being attacked. --āSock Jobā Gabriel stops pretending to have a girlfriend, and now just wants tips on solo sock jobbing. Moving on to stockings, high heels and bare feet, the foot fetishists flock to this show like a Loubotin and Savage X Fenti sale, and I trample them (virtually) with love (and a little glitter)⦠sporting shady shades, from pineapple (eat it for better-tasting semen!) sunglasses to Mammon Dollar Eyes.Ā --Britney is FREEāyay! Finally, she can get married and do what the f*ck she wants. Now FREE ASSANGE! At least Belmarsh prison gave him permission to marry his partner Stella Moris, the mother of his two sons, at the prison. Yay! We may be Bizarro, but we love marriage⦠for people who want to get married. --Kyle Rittenhouse's blubbering performance in the Brett Kavanaugh tradition of lying male ammosexual self-pity, coupled with the judge's blatantly racist rulings, might just get that little crying killer off the hook for the crimes he committed that we all have witnessed. Yikes! --The new Dune remake is a beautiful bore (I wanted more worms!), but it's nice to know that we are all welcome to have public sex in the Spanish Canary Island dunes. Just please don't leave your used condoms in the sand. Speaking of sand, we are sinking into Capitalogenic quicksand, going down deeper and faster every day, mentally (peeps be going nuts), physically (the nuts be killing the rest of us) and in terms of climate change. The sands of time are pouring in on us, but we're too busy staring worshipfully at celebrities like Kylie to hear truthtellers like Greta. Of course, that's the way the billionaires like us to be. --Some commenters express support for our struggle with the City of Arcadia inspector and disdain for their continuing harassment of Bonoboville. What a travesty of zoning justice! What Mattress Madness! More developments developing soon⦠--In this week's orgiastic throwback, Capt'n Max's Bday & Bonobo Way 3rd Anniversary 2017, sexy Onyx Muse spanks Chimesmaker Jacob, & the amazing Goddess Soma turns Miss Antoinette into a human birthday candle. #GoBonobos for Hot Wax. Happy Friendsgiving and have a nice (not too nasty) Naughty November. Read more prose and watch the shows (that are too kinky for Youtube): https://drsusanblock .com/fdr-naughty-november Need to talk PRIVATELY about something you can't talk about anywhere else? You can talk with us⦠Call the Therapists Without Borders of the Dr. Susan Block Institute anytime: 213.291.9497. We're here for YOU.
I festeggiamenti per la puntata 600 e i flashback dalle precedenti puntate x00. Anagrafica Nazionale Online. Niente pinch to zoom in tribunale. Ritorno agli auricolari col filo. Icelandverse e Metaverso. Sorveglianza nei Territori Occupati. Queste e molte altre le notizie tech commentate nella puntata di questa settimana. Dallo studio distribuito di digitalia: Franco Solerio, Massimo De Santo, Michele Di Maio Produttori esecutivi: Vincenzo Ingenito, Davide Tinti, Alessio Ferrara, Marco Pasqualotto, Marco Grechi, Alessio Conforto, Alessandro Lazzarini, Davide Capra, Giuliano Arcinotti, Stefano De Rossi, Fotogp Di Barabino Marco, Raffaele Viero, Raffaele Marco Della Monica, Luigi Ricco, Christophe Sollami, Marco De Nadai, Renato Battistin, Luca Ubiali, Roberto Medeossi, Diego Arati, Alessandro Morgantini, Antonio Taurisano, Mario Giammona, Calogero Augusta, Simone Podico, Michelangelo Rocchetti, Dario Nardi, Iacopo Edoardo Federici, Denis Grosso, Pier Luigi Ranghino, Giuseppe Marmo, Ruben Livrieri, Giovanni Priolo, Letizia Calcinai, Mirko Fornai, Paolo Tegoni, Manuel Zavatta, Niccolò V., Claudio P., Alessio Giannelli Sponsor: Squarespace.com - utilizzate il codice coupon "DIGITALIA" per avere il 10% di sconto sul costo dell'abbonamento. Links: Credit card PINs can be guessed even when covering the ATM pad Elon Musk - I keep forgetting that you're still alive Are AirPods Out? Why Cool Kids Are Wearing Wired Headphones Il programma di controllo biometrico dell'esercito israeliano sui palestinesi At what BTC price will Satoshi Nakamoto become the world's richest person? Classic Mods And Old GTA Games + Unfinished Remakes Il primo iPhone con USB-C è andato all'asta per 86001 dollari Il 15 novembre parte l'Anagrafica Nazionale online Julian Assange allowed to marry partner Stella Moris in jail You shall not pinch to zoom: trial judge disallows basic iPad feature Sito di Fedez sul voto 2023 Sfida politica o spot? NVIDIA Announces Platform for Creating AI Avatars Life-size robot reminding people to adhere to personal hygiene Judge rejects Apple's arguments for delaying ordered iOS App Store changes You're Already Living in the Metaverse Israel escalates surveillance of Palestinians with facial recognition program in West Bank Gingilli del giorno: COSE Spiegate bene - La rivista di carta del Post Melting Memories Rows - The spreadsheet where teams work faster Supporta Digitalia, diventa produttore esecutivo.
How the U.S. military is fueling the climate crisis; Julian Assange's partner Stella Moris on WikiLeaks exposƩs of corporate and state meddling in climate crisis resolutions. Get Democracy Now! delivered right to your inbox. Sign up for the Daily Digest: democracynow.org/subscribe
How the U.S. military is fueling the climate crisis; Julian Assange's partner Stella Moris on WikiLeaks exposƩs of corporate and state meddling in climate crisis resolutions. Get Democracy Now! delivered right to your inbox. Sign up for the Daily Digest: democracynow.org/subscribe
Max Blumenthal and Ben Norton speak with Stella Moris, the fiancƩe of imprisoned WikiLeaks journalist Julian Assange, about CIA threats, the appeal hearings in the US extradition case, and how this scandal threatens freedom of the press around the world.
This week on the Global Research News Hour we bring a special program focused on the plight of Julian Assange. We look not only on the details of the recent appeal of the Extradition Trial, we probe his history and background, the role of Wikileaks, and the eventual erasure of journalism manifest in attempts to continue the assault on Assange. Our round of guest speakers include John Shipton, the father of Assange, John Kiriakou, Joe Lauria, Binoy Kampmark, and Megan Sherman with appearances by Stella Moris, Assange's fiancee, and John Pilger.
Stella Moris met Julian Assange while working as part of his legal team. Now they have two children together and are hoping to get married one day. Stella makes the case for Julian Assange to be freed from Britain's maximum security prison and to have the request for extradition to the USA denied.
The Dominic Cummings interview and why everyone's getting 'pinged'; the longtime secret Assange/Moris relationship, and his possible extradition; and did the ancestors of a German prince help Hitler take power?
Please support Julian Assange's Case https://www.crowdjustice.com/case/assangeappeal/ Human Rights lawyer and Julian Assange's fiancƩe Stella Moris delivers an urgent update about what's next for the Wikileaks founder. In the process, she destroys the legal case against Julian, points out that the star witness is a diagnosed sociopath & convicted pedophile, and argues why freedom of press has already been harmed by the treatment of Assange. Of course, it will only get worse unless and until he is finally free. The United Kingdom's High Court has granted the Biden administration the right to appeal a lower court's ruling which blocked the extradition of Julian Assange to the United States.
Reuters reports that Haitian security forces apprehended more men today believed to have killed President MoĆÆse at his home on Wednesday. Ajamu Baraka, former VP Candidate for the Green Party, joins us to discuss the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moise. New reports indicate that the First Lady is still alive in a Miami hospital and more suspects involved in the attack have been apprehended.Taylor Hudak, journalist and editor of Activism Munich, and co-founder of Action for Assange joins us to discuss the Assange case. The High Court of Justice in the United Kingdom agreed this week to hear the United States government's appeal in the extradition case against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange on "limited grounds." Assange's partner Stella Moris said that the High Court rejected the efforts of the US government to "second guess the magistrates' conclusions on medical and expert evidence."Dr. Yolandra Hancock, board-certified pediatrician and obesity medicine specialist, joins us to discuss covid. President Joe Biden expressed increased concerns about coronavirus's delta variant and said door-to-door visits and visits to places of worship will happen this summer in an attempt to reach Americans who have not yet been vaccinated.Ray McGovern, former CIA analyst and co-founder of Veteran Intelligence, joins us to talk about this week's Anti-war.com article that declared Wednesday's New York Times article by David Sanger on Russian hackers to be a "big nothing-burger."James Carey, editor/co-owner at Geopoliticsalert.com, and Miko Peled, author and activist, come together to discuss Palestine. Palestinians, unable to reunite with their families, see no reward in ending the Israeli Citizenship Law.Danny Sjursen, retired US Army Major and author of "Patriotic Dissent: America in the Age of Endless War," joins us to talk about rocket attacks on US military bases in Syria and Iraq and the Katyusha's rockets that landed near the US embassy in Baghdad's highly fortified Green Zone.Martin Sieff, senior fellow at the American University in Moscow, joins us to discuss a report that says the founder of Blackwater had a $10 billion plan to develop weapons and create a private army in Ukraine.Nino Pagliccia, activist and writer, joins us to talk about Venezuela and Latin America. He discusses an Orinoco Tribune article that analyzes the real role of the non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Venezuela. The article makes the case that these NGOs focus their activity to the "strategic and political control of society, to what euphemistically in the United States is called regime change."
Wyatt Reed, Sputnik news analyst and producer for By Any Means Necessary, joins us to discuss elections in Mexico. Wyatt has traveled to Mexico to cover the elections. He joins us to discuss the street interviews that he has conducted, the violence that has occurred during the campaign season, and the outcome.Mark Sleboda, Moscow-based international relations security analyst, joins us to discuss Russian President Putin's speech. President Putin recently spoke at the St. Petersburg summit, at which time he proposed that the United States is on a downward trajectory similar to that of the Soviet Union. Putin said that an empire creates many problems for itself, "but problems keep piling up. And, at some point, they are no longer able to cope with them. And the United States is now walking the Soviet Union's path, and its gait is confident and steady."Dan Cohen, filmmaker and writer for the Gray Zone Project, joins us to discuss Israel. Israel is once again receiving global condemnation for its treatment of the Palestinians. The Israeli military has arrested and detained two Palestinian activists and a reporter who are both covering and resisting the forced expulsions in Sheikh Jarrah. This comes just days before the Israeli courts are set to rule on major issues related to the expulsions. Daniel Lazare, investigative journalist, author of The Velvet Coup, joins us to discuss Julian Assange. Julian Assange's fiancee Stella Moris, Geneva Mayor Frederique Perler, and UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Nils Melzer called for his release and an end to US extradition proceedings against him on Friday. This action is part of an effort designed to make a push for corrective action just before the G7 summit. Also, world-renowned whistleblower Danial Ellsberg has released new classified information, and is daring the US government to take similar action against him at 90 years old. Kathy Kelly, an American peace activist, one of the founding members of Voices in the Wilderness, and co-coordinator for Voices for Creative Nonviolence, joins us to discuss Afghanistan. A recent New York Times article seems to have been written as a public relations piece for the CIA, as it presents a detailed disposition of the intelligence agency's claims against leaving Afghanistan. Also, the US is again spending huge amounts of money for foreign interventions as the Biden administration has pledged 3.3 billion dollars for the Afghanistan military. Laith Marouf, broadcaster and journalist based in Beirut, Lebanon, joins us to discuss Lebanon. Laith discusses an interesting article regarding the US interests in Lebanon. The Biden administration has quietly decided to give an additional 15 million dollars to Lebanon. Observers suspect that the money is being directed towards a clandestine anti-Hezbollah campaign rather than towards providing stability.Nick Davies, peace activist and author of "Blood on Our Hands: The American Invasion of Iraq," joins us to discuss the US endless war campaign. A recent poll demonstrated exactly what most security analysts would predict. Most Americans oppose the endless war campaign waged by the US empire, and would rather see the money wasted on these wars used for domestic purposes. Ted Rall, political cartoonist and syndicated columnist, joins us to discuss political cartoonists. He talks about the problems that political cartoonists face in a time when dissident opinions are being suppressed. Cartoonists have been censored and repressed worldwide and making a living in that field is getting nearly impossible for those who choose the path of honesty and professionalism.
This episode features comments by drone whistleblower Daniel Hale, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist James Risen, Wikileaks founder Julian Assange's half brother Gabriel Shipton, Julian Assange's attorney and partner Stella Moris, as well as Policy Director for Defending Rights and Dissent Chip Gibbons. Some of our guests were featured recently on CODEPINK Congress, a Tuesday night program, focused on demilitarization and foreign policy. This show takes a close look at how whistleblowers Hale and Assange revealed war crimes by the US government, as well as how the Espionage Act of 1917 is used to crush dissent
The Trump administration is upping the ante in its confrontation with China in the waterways of the South China Sea."Since late January, American B-1B and B-52 bombers, usually operating in pairs, have flown about 20 missions over key waterways, including the South China Sea, the East China Sea and the Sea of Japan," Reuters reported Tuesday. What is the endgame here?On Monday, US President Donald Trump defended Kyle Rittenhouse, the suspect in the shootings last week in Kenosha, Wisconsin, as having acted in self-defense. The president said, "We're looking at all of it. That was an interesting situation. You saw the same tape as I saw," adding that it appeared Rittenhouse was "very violently attacked" by demonstrators. There seem to be a number of problems with this statement. How should we interpret this?Stella Moris, WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange's partner, "says he is in 'a lot of pain' and 'a lot thinner' after she visited him in Belmarsh prison with their two children for the first time in six months," the Daily Mail reported on August 25. What's going on in his world?There's a health crisis and civil unrest in the US, and 57.3 million workers have filed for unemployment over the past five months, according to US Labor Department numbers. Meanwhile, Congress sits out, failing to provide more relief while the country faces its largest-ever eviction crisis, activists say. What are we to make of this?"Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that Israel has held secret talks with several Arab countries to normalize their relations, a day before Israel's first commercial flight to the United Arab Emirates (UAE)," Xinhua News Agency reported Monday. "'There are many more unpublicized meetings with Arab and Muslim leaders,' Netanyahu said during joint remarks in Jerusalem alongside US President Donald Trump's senior advisor Jared Kushner and national security advisor Robert O'Brien." What's the long-term objective of these meetings and agreements?Our next guest Marshall Auerback co-authored a Monday piece in CounterPunch entitled "The Rotten Alliance of Liberals and Neocons Will Likely Shape US Foreign Policy for Years to Come." What does this mean for the US and the world going forward?A Monday op-ed in Politico was entitled "Take It From Eastern Europe: Now Is Not the Time to Go Soft on Russia," with the subheadline saying, "Vladimir Putin continues to undermine liberal democracy in Europe and beyond. America should not turn its back on that threat."Our last story will be a discussion of the Tuesday Antiwar.com article "America's Expeditionary Kleptocracy: A Banana Republic and Its Banana Wars." We are joined by its author, retired US Army Major Danny Sjursen. GuestsKJ Noh - Peace activist, writer and teacherMargaret Kimberley - Editor and senior columnist at Black Agenda Report and author of "Prejudential: Black America and the Presidents"Karen Kwiatkowski - Retired US Air Force lieutenant colonel, anti-war activist and farmerDanny Haiphong - Author and contributor to Black Agenda ReportCharles Simmons - Attorney, international fellow at Columbia University, professor emeritus of journalism at Eastern Michigan University and co-director of the Hush House Museum & Cultural Center in Detroit, MichiganMarshall Auerback - Market analyst and research associate at the Levy Economics Institute at Bard College Mark Sleboda, Moscow - based International Relations and Security AnalystDanny Sjursen - Retired US Army major and author of "Patriotic Dissent: America in the Age of Endless War"
Stella Moris, lawyer and life partner of Julian Assange, joins the show to discuss the current status of Assange's case and it's implications for global journalism. Hosts Matt Taibbi and Katie Halper discuss arguments for and against independent journalism outlet Substack. Merch link: https://teespring.com/stores/useful-idiots Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices