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+1 +1
LNG is an intelligence operation
TC Energy has spies, soldiers, even a former CIA director pushing pipelines and fracking in B.C. But they’re not invincible.
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+3 +1
‘We’ve all enabled the situation’
Dems turn on Biden’s inner sanctum
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+18 +1
Michael Hudson: The Truth about the Destruction of the Palestinians
What Michael Hudson learned about Palestinians from the Mossad 50 years ago: "The aim all along has been to kill them."
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+4 +1
'To stop a war': Did Soleimani killing violate international law?
Experts agree use of self-defence as justification for killing Soleimani requires proof of 'imminent attack'.
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+11 +1
What Really Happened to Malaysia’s Missing Airplane
Five years ago, the flight vanished into the Indian Ocean. Officials on land know more about why than they dare to say.
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+8 +1
Triton is the world’s most murderous malware, and it’s spreading
When the Australian security consultant Julian Gutmanis was summoned to a petrochemical plant in Saudi Arabia in the summer of 2017, what he found made his blood run cold. By Martin Giles. (Mar. 5, 2019)
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+3 +1
Governments are deploying spyware on killers, drug lords – and journalists
Sophisticated digital spyware such as Pegasus can turn cellphones into secret agents to take aim at advocates, lawyers, scientists, and the media – and these programs know no borders. By John Scott-Railton, Ronald J. Deibert.
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+2 +1
Why Didn’t the Lusitania Sinking Send the U.S. to War?
It would be two years before the first armed American destroyers sailed for Europe. By Joanna Scutts.
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+3 +1
Did the CIA Orchestrate an Attack on the North Korean Embassy in Spain?
A Nation investigation reveals a Rashomon-like tale with conflicting truths. By Tim Shorrock.
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+3 +1
Moon of Alabama: Random Guyaidó's New Coup Attempt Turns Out to Be A Dangerous Joke
It seems that the whole event is over.
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+12 +1
The Buried Maidan Massacre and Its Misrepresentation by the West
The new Ukrainian government is faced with reopening an inquiry into evidence of an organized mass killing in Kiev that Poroshenko stonewalled. Ivan Katchanovski investigates.
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+17 +1
Behind the Assange Saga: Radicalized by Frustration
WikiLeaks’ publishing of the so-called 'Vault 7' trove of the CIA is what propelled the United States government to feel like it needed to take action against the organization. By William M. Arkin.
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+18 +1
Pair who hid Ed Snowden granted refugee status, will live in Montreal
“Now we are permanent residents in Canada and we are safe and free,” Vanessa Mae Rodel said. “Thank you Canada and Quebec.” By Tom Blackwell.
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+2 +1
A New Age of Warfare: How Internet Mercenaries Do Battle for Authoritarian Governments
Sophisticated surveillance, once the domain of world powers, is increasingly available on the private market. Smaller countries are seizing on the tools — sometimes for darker purposes. By Mark Mazzetti, Adam Goldman, Ronen Bergman and Nicole Perlroth.
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+14 +1
In Venezuela, White Supremacy Is a Key Driver of the Coup
The so-called uprising is, in part, a furious backlash against sharing power with mixed-race Venezuelans like Maduro. By Greg Palast. (Feb. 7, 2019)
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+22 +1
How can the US monitor the world if we all use Huawei?
Why does the US government always crack down on Huawei? To achieve this, it even uses some disgraceful measures, including slandering the company by exerting its national power. The US moves have sparked questions as to why the US fears the Chinese company so much. Why does the company annoy the US?
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+19 +1
How sloppy OPSEC gave researchers an inside look at the exploit industry
New information from Lookout has given the public unique insights into how nation-states buy and develop surveillance exploits. By Greg Otto.
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+25 +1
What an Uncensored Letter to M.L.K. Reveals
Would the F.B.I.’s smear campaign against Martin Luther King Jr. work today? By Beverly Gage. (Nov. 11, 2014)
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+14 +1
The Vice President’s Men
When George H.W. Bush arrived in Washington as vice president in January 1981 he seemed little more than a sideshow to Ronald Reagan, the one-time leading man who had been overwhelmingly elected to the greatest stage in the world... By Seymour M. Hersh.
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+38 +1
The Year-Long, Undercover Plot To Blow Up EVE Online's Most Notorious Space Station
In theory, anything can happen in EVE Online, but some things are considered impossible. Well, last month, one of the “impossible” things happened: The destruction of the game’s first-ever Keepstar battlestation, which was kept in a wormhole. Of course, it took 11 months of meticulous planning. By Lee Yancy.
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