Thursday, April 14, 2022

Twitter Re-Ban of Scott Ritter, Kafkaesque Support of Impersonator, Is All About Anti-Russia Propaganda — Yves Smith

Twitter's response: Not censorship, content-moderation. Oh, ok.

Hey, if you can get away with banning a sitting president of the US, I guess anything goes nowadays.

Excellent post by Yves Smith as always.

The infowar/psyops/strategic communications, etc. (euphemisms for "propaganda") is getting so thick that only the brain dead would believe it. In Russia the word going around the street is that the US media is now worse that Pravda in the days of the USSR when no Russian believed it anymore. Unfortunately, since the infowar against it, Russia has deemed it a security requirement needed to be to be addressed with similar controls. The Chinese figured it out long ago and closed their information space. Now the US is following suit. The excuse that the government is not doing it so it, which would contravene the Bill of rights, but it is permissible for private media to regulate their space, because it's non-government and there is plausible deniability of government involvement. That is BS.

BTW, FT reports that Elon Musk has offered to buy Twitter at its current market capitalization of 43 billion US.

Naked Capitalism
Twitter Re-Ban of Scott Ritter, Kafkaesque Support of Impersonator, Is All About Anti-Russia Propaganda
Yves Smith

See also

41 comments:

Footsoldier said...

This is impressive

The United states of arms in one graphic

Shows the flow of arms from 1950 - 2017


https://mobile.twitter.com/MnarMuh/status/1514075492189720589?cxt=HHwWmsC-sezoiYMqAAAA



The US has killed more than 20 million people since WW2 for “freedom and democracy”.


Not to mention how many countries they have performed regime change and call it liberal democracy. When it is Democracy at the end of a gun.

Footsoldier said...

Murdered 20 million people while


a) Americans were fighting each other in America due to left or right.


b) Americans were asleep, brainwashed to the point of being brain dead.


It's an easy thing to do. The British Empire and third Reich showed just how easy it is to hypnotise their populations by their flag.





Peter Pan said...

Private property is private. If you want free speech, that belongs in the commons.

That being said, there are competitors offering more open platforms - consumers have only themselves to blame, for not taking up these offers.

Footsoldier said...

If you want to see what the budget would look like under a Republican.


Then it's here all broken down for you.


https://www.heritage.org


Budget Blueprint for Fiscal Year 2022 then click on policy proposals.


Itemises the whole budget for you.


I've even heard some Republicans push a lot of these policy proposals in public. Mike Pence rattled off at least a dozen of these propsals.

Footsoldier said...

National Defense:

Transition the Domestic Dependent Elementary and Secondary Schools and Allow for School Choice for Military Families -$700M

Rebalance the Air Force towards Increased Relevant Capabilities + $31,699M

Reform the Basic Allowance for Military Housing -$14,720M

Increase the Capacity and Capabilities of the Army + $61,941M

Reform Military Health Care -$60,317M

Preparing the Navy for Great Power Competition. + $115,924M

Replace Military Personnel in Commercial Positions with Civilian Employees -$19,600M

Combine Military Exchanges and Commissaries and Reduce Commissary
Subsidies -$2,627M

Cut Non-Defense Research from the Defense Department Budget -$14,470M

Implement Cost-Saving Reforms at Environmental Management Cleanup of Defense Sites
-$12,000M

International Affairs:

Eliminate Funding for the United Nations Population Fund. $0

Eliminate the African Development Foundation and the Inter-American Foundation
-$710M

Cut U.S. Development Assistance Programs -$32,709M

Eliminate the State Department's Assistance for Europe, Eurasia and Central Asia (AEECA) Account -$7,700M

Eliminate $53.6 Million in Programming in the 44 Countries Where Total U.S. Foreign Aid Per Country is Under $5 Million -$536M

Reduce Funding and Reevaluate U.S. Membership in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) -$115M

End Funding for the United Nations Development Program -$800M

End U.S. Funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees -$3,183M

End Funding for the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change -$100M

Eliminate the U.S. Trade and Development Agency -$918M

Enforce the Cap on United Nations Peacekeeping Assessments -$1,840M

Footsoldier said...

General science, space & Technology:


Eliminate NASA's Office of STEM Engagement -$1,440M


Reduce and Rationalize DOE Office of Science -$24,717M

Cut and Cap Funding for the National Science Foundation -$29,095M


Energy:

Eliminate the DOE Office of Fossil Energy -$8,567M


Reduce the DOE Office of Nuclear Energy -$5,808M


Eliminate the DOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy -$13,722M


Eliminate the DOE Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy Program -$4,830M


Eliminate DOE Loan Programs -$395M


Reduce the DOE Office of Electricity -$500M


Auction Off the Four Remaining Power Marketing Administrations -$273M


Auction Off the Tennessee Valley Authority -$105,002M


Rescind Unobligated Balances from the Enrichment Corporation Fund -$1,300M


Liquidate the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and the Northeastern Home Heating Oil and Gasoline Supply Reserves -$1,772M

Footsoldier said...

Natural Resources and Environment:

Eliminate the Stratospheric Ozone Multilateral Fund and Reduce Domestic Programs
-$148M


Reduce Federal Stationary Source Regulations activities and Federal Support for Air Quality Management -$548M


Reduce Funding for the EPA's Atmospheric Protection Program -$950M


Reduce EPA Grants to Reflect Progress and Actual Risk -$28,787M


Scrap Superfund to Address Defects in Program Design -$1,761M


Reduce EPA Research Programs -$2,140M


Reduce the EPA's Geographic Programs -$6,192M


Reform the EPA $0


Freeze Federal Vehicle and Fuels Standards and Certification Program -$142M


Transform Water Resources Policy -$53,297M


Eliminate the Land and Water Conservation Fund -$20,000M


Footsoldier said...

Agriculture:


Eliminate the USDA Rural Business-Cooperative Service -$1,304M


Eliminate the USDA Conservation Technical Assistance Program -$8,226M


Repeal the USDA Catfish Inspection Program -$25.3M


Eliminate the USDA Market Access Program -$2,000M


Eliminate USDA Revenue-Based Crop Insurance Policies -$37,928M


Eliminate USDA Marketing Orders and Checkoff Programs -$207M


Eliminate the USDA Sugar Program -$155M


Reduce Premium Subsidies in the Federal Crop Insurance Program -$31,800M


Repeal the USDA Agriculture Risk Coverage and Price Loss Coverage Programs
-$42,055M

Eliminate Section 5 Discretionary Spending Authority under the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act. $0



Footsoldier said...

Commerce and Housing Credit:


Eliminate Census Bureau Funding for the Annual Supplemental Poverty Measure Report
-$75M


Eliminate the Small Business Administration -$10,875M


Cut Taxpayer Funding for the Commodity Futures Trading Commission -$3,533M


Eliminate the Commerce Department's Hollings Manufacturing Extension Partnership
-$1,688M


Eliminate the Commerce Department's Economic Development Administration
-$3,794M



Reform the Securities and Exchange Commission. $0


Eliminate the Commerce Department's Minority Business Development Agency -$550M


Replace Costly Provisions of Dodd-Frank -$19,500M


End the Conservatorships of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. -$76,000M


Eliminate the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage Program -$6,900


Footsoldier said...

Transportation:


Close Down the Transportation Department's Maritime Administration and Repeal the Maritime Jones Act -$10,078M

Phase Out Grants to the National Rail Passenger Service Corporation (Amtrak)
-$19,505M

Eliminate Subsidies for the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority
-$1,693M

Privatize the Transportation Department's Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation -$428M

Eliminate the Transportation Department's Capital Investment Grants -$22,732M

Eliminate the National Infrastructure Investment (RAISE) Program -$11,287M

Eliminate the Transportation Department's Essential Air Service Program
-$1,582M

Transform Aviation Policy -$99,107M


Eliminate Federal-State Partnership for State of Good Repair -$2,259M


Highway Trust Fund Reform -$16,763M



Community and Regional Development:


Eliminate Regional Commissions -$2,380M



Eliminate the Community Development Block Grant -$39,222M



Eliminate the Department of the Treasury's Community Development Financial Institutions Fund -$3,056M


Reform Federal Disaster Policy -$127,603M





Footsoldier said...

Education, Training, Employment & Social services:



Eliminate Taxpayer Funding for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
-$432M


Privatize the Corporation for Public Broadcasting -$5,349M


Eliminate the Corporation for National and Community Service -$12.7B



Eliminate Funding for the Institute of Museum and Library Services -$2,913M



Eliminate Bureau of International Labor Affairs -$960M



Eliminate Department of Labor's Women's Bureau -$140M


Bring National Labor Relations Board Funding in Line with Caseloads -$1,843M


Cut the Annual Smithsonian Institution Subsidy by 30 Percent and Cap It at That Amount -$5,080M



Eliminate Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act Job-Training Programs -$39B



Eliminate the Job Corps -$19,901M



Eliminate Susan Harwood Training Grants -$136M



Eliminate Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars -$165M



Eliminate Taxpayer Funding for National Endowments of the Arts and Humanities
-$3,785M


Reduce Funding for the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights
-$943M



Block Federal Spending on Racially-Discriminatory Education Programs in District of Columbia Public Schools. $0


Eliminate Competitive/Project Grant Programs and Reduce Spending on Formula Grant Programs -$201,441M




Wind-Down the U.S. Department of Education. -$332,975M



Allow Universities to Cap Borrowing -$9,044M



Remove Cap on Interest Rate for Student Loans -$12B



Eliminate Mandatory Add-On for Pell Grants -$57B


Place Lending Caps on All Federal Loan Programs -$33B



Sunset Head Start to Make Way for Better State and Local Alternatives -$63,800M



Eliminate the PLUS Loan Program -$39B


Decouple Federal Student Aid from Accreditation -$9,400M


End Student Loan Forgiveness -$28B


Eliminate Federal Support Educational Opportunity Grants -$10,166M



Expand the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program. -$961M



Eliminate GEAR Up -$4,212M













Footsoldier said...

Health:


Put Federal Medicaid Spending on a Budget. -$1,213,000M


End the Enhanced Federal Match Rate to Non-ACA Medicaid Expansion States
-$16,361M


End Medicaid Provider Taxes -$497,000M



Eliminate ACA Insurance Subsidies and Medicaid Funding. -$929.7B


Eliminate ACA Congressional Subsidies -$1,142M


Reduce funding for the Title X Family Planning Program -$50M



Medicare :


Expand Medicare Site Neutral Payments. -$63,240M


Reduce Taxpayer Subsidies for Wealthy Medicare Recipients. -$511,415M



Harmonize Medicare's Age of Eligibility with Social Security. -$29,000M



Consolidate Medicare Physician and Hospital Programs -$106,900M


Modify Medicare Advantage Payment System. -$42,008M



Convert Medicare to a Premium Support System -$1,004,588M



Update Medicare Premiums. -$514,000M






Footsoldier said...

Income Security:



Eliminate Funding for the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program -$42,327M



Eliminate Funding for the Community Services Block Grant -$8,528M



Return Control of and Fiscal Responsibility for Low-Income Housing to the States
-$351,806M



Reduce Funding for the Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity -$412M



Federal Personnel Reform: Eliminate the Special Retirement Supplement -$10,600M


Federal Personnel Reform: Bring Retirement Benefits in Line with the Private Sector
-$236,542M


Eliminate Supplemental Security Income Benefits for Children -$116,000M



Eliminate Funding for the Community Eligibility Provision -$1,174M



Eliminate the “Heat and Eat” Loophole in Food Stamps. -$5,700M



End Broad-Based Categorical Eligibility for Food Stamps -$28,536M


Reduce Fraud and Marriage Penalties in the Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit -$161,472M


Enforce and Strengthen Work Requirements for Able-Bodied Adults Food Stamp Recipients -$110,639M


Eliminate Funding for the Social Services Block Grant -$16,154M


Strengthen Work Requirements in the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program
$0


Eliminate Concurrent Receipt of Retirement Pay and Disability Compensation for Veterans -$160,000M









Footsoldier said...

Social Security:


Update Social Security's Eligibility Age and Index It to Life Expectancy -$76,400M


Gradually Shift Social Security to a Flat Benefit -$667,000M


Allow Workers to Opt Out of Social Security's Earnings Test. $0


Give Workers an Ownership Option in Social Security. $0


Disability Insurance: Offer an Optional, Private Disability Insurance Alternative
-$15,200M




Disability Insurance: Update the Official List of Available Jobs in the National Economy -$7,000M



Disability Insurance: End Direct Payments to SSDI Representatives -$8,300M


Disability Insurance: Eliminate the Medical Improvement Review Standard (MIRS) in the CDR Process -$1,860M


Disability Insurance: Eliminate the “Grid” Qualifications -$34,200M



Disability Insurance: Allow Use of Social Media $0



Disability Insurance: Apply Administrative Law Judge Reforms -$3,800M



Disability Insurance: Strengthen Continuing-Disability Reviews (CDRs) -$12,600M


Disability Insurance: Shift to a Flat, Anti-Poverty Benefit -$218,000M



Disability Insurance: Establish Time-Limited, Needs-Based Benefits -$4,600M


Disability Insurance: Limit Retroactive Benefits to Six Months, Instead of 12 Months
-$18,100M


Disability Insurance: End Double-Dipping Between Disability Insurance and Unemployment Insurance Programs -$5,400M




Veterans Benefits & Services:


End Enrollment in VA Medical Care for Veterans in Priority Groups 7 and 8
-$66,800M


Cap GI Bill Flight Training Benefits -$137M


Put a 10-Year Time Limit on Initial Applications for Disability Compensation for Veterans -$20,000M


Narrow Eligibility for Veterans Disability by Excluding Disabilities Unrelated to Military Duties -$37,600M












Footsoldier said...

Administration of Justice :


Eliminate the Legal Services Corporation -$5,248M


Eliminate Grants Within the Justice Department's Office of Justice Programs
-$23,594M


Rescind Unobligated Balances from the Justice Department's Crime Victims Fund
-$16,804M

Rescind Unobligated Balances from the Justice Department's Asset Forfeiture Fund
-$16,934M



Eliminate the Justice Department's Office of Community Oriented Policing Services
-$3,772M


Eliminate Violence Against Women Act Programs and Grants -$5,769M



Rescind Unobligated Balances from the Treasury Forfeiture Fund -$4,420M


Limit USCIS Fee Waivers and Exemptions -$5,900M




General government:



Federal Personnel Reform: Eliminate the 25 Percent FEHB Premium Requirement. $0



Federal Personnel Reform: Tie Pay Increases to Truly Market-Based and Performance-Based Measures -$30,953M


Federal Personnel Reform: Eliminate “Rest of U.S.” Locality Pay -$2,690M



Federal Personnel Reform: Eliminate FEHB Retirement Benefits for New Hires
-$41,293M


Prioritize Legislative Branch Spending. $0


Repeal the Rum Excise Tax Cover-Over -$7,089M







Footsoldier said...

Multiple Jurisdictions:


Reform the Interior Department. $0


Eliminate the Rural Utilities Service -$12,583M


Eliminate the Department of Labor's Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
-$1,282M


Eliminate Allocations to the Housing Trust Fund and Capital Magnet Fund
-$4,333M



Safeguard Private Pension Insurance and Protect Taxpayers from Private Pension Bailouts. $0


Adopt a More Accurate Inflation Index for Social Security and Other Mandatory Programs -$280,700M


Retain the Hyde Amendment and other Pro-Life and Conscience Rights Riders
-$300M


Repeal the Davis-Bacon Act -$118,622M


Limit Taxpayer Funding for Government Agency Public Relations and Increase Transparency $0


Direct Funding to Health Centers not Entangled with Abortion $0


Stop Paying Federal Employees to Work for Outside Organizations -$2,170M









Matt Franko said...

Musk offering 54 yet twtr trading at 45…

Where else have you ever seen this except with something involving Trump…

Just tell all these people to go over to Truth Social … trump approaching 1M followers over there …

Truth subs ready to 🚀 stop wasting time on twtr…

Tom Hickey said...

Private property is private. If you want free speech, that belongs in the commons.

The public/private distinction is false other in minimal cases like personal property.

Everything economic stems from the commons, and especially everything that has to do with use of the public "air waves." On top of that public institutions are required for private business to operate.

"Liberalism" not withstanding. This is an ideology justifying oppression by privileged elites.

I am a libertarian of the left, which means maximum freedom for all without impinging on the freedom of others, based on rights and responsibilities, and accountability. This requires a context of genuinely democratic institutions, where rights protect minorities from the tyranny of the majority.

Footsoldier said...

Finally Changes to the Tax Code:



Create Universal Savings Accounts -$36,840M


Repeal Energy Tax Subsidies. + $145,784M


Continue Expensing for Investments in Research and Development -$128,487M



Make Full and Immediate Expensing for Capital Investments from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Permanent -$213,400M


Repeal the Death Tax -$293,900M


Index Capital Gains for Inflation -$143,800M



Neutral Cost Recovery for Investment in Structures -$10,500M



Repeal the Research and Development Tax Credit.+ $241,834M


Repeal the Work Opportunity Tax Credit + $8,495M



Repeal the Tax Credit for Employer FICA Taxes on Employee Tips. + $17,020M



Repeal the Historic Rehabilitation Tax Credit. + $8,781M


Repeal the Railroad Maintenance Tax Credit. + $407M



Ensure the Individual Tax Relief from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is Made Permanent
-$1,603,733M


Repeal the Low Income Housing Tax Credit. + $98,122M


Repeal the State and Local Tax Deduction.+ $1,114,192M



Repeal the Tax Credit for Orphan Drug Research.+ 64,109M


Repeal Place-Based Economic Development Tax Subsidies.+ $11,147M



Repeal Education Tax Subsidies.+ $141,153M


Repeal the Exclusion for Workers' Compensation Benefits.+ $28,590M



Repeal Tax Exclusions for Certain Employee Fringe Benefits.+ $59,430M



Repeal the Additional Standard Deduction for the Elderly.+ $43,050M


Repeal Childcare Tax Subsidies.+ $31,060M


Repeal Tax Exclusion for Interest Income on Infrastructure Bonds.+ $153,300M


Lower the Corporate Tax Rate and Increase the Qualified Business Income Deduction
-$960.838B
















Footsoldier said...

This is a great exercise and gives you a very good idea what a Republican budget would look like and what their priorities are ....

You will start to hear a lot more of these things.


Listen to Mike Pence

Peter Pan said...

@ Tom

We either create a commons version of Twitter etc. or we limit ourselves to respecting private property and their rules. In the case of social media, there is competition. It's up to consumers to act intelligently. There's an argument to be made to stop using social media altogether.

Libertarians are supposed to value property rights above all else. Minimal government, and as little regulation as possible.

Tom Hickey said...

Maybe Elon should consider opening his own free speech alternative(s). There's opportunities to seize.

Peter Pan said...

He's willing to pay for the Twitter brand. Most consumers are sheep and flock to what is already popular. How did Twitter, FB, YT become so dominant? Herd behavior.

Tom Hickey said...

Libertarians are supposed to value property rights above all else.

This is the crucial difference between Libertarians (libertarians of the right) and libertarians of left. The former hold that property rights are absolute, and the latter that they are relative to other rights, responsibilities, context and conditions. For libertarians of the left, no right is rigidly absolute, whereas for the hardcore Libertarians, the non-aggression principle and property rights are rigidly absolute and sufficient in themselves.

Tom Hickey said...

He's willing to pay for the Twitter brand. Most consumers are sheep and flock to what is already popular. How did Twitter, FB, YT become so dominant? Herd behavior.

Well, Truth Social is a startup launched to meet this need. While it would be simpler to acquire an existing brand, a major shareholder of Twitter has nixed a Musk takeover.

Matt Franko said...

Musk already has 80m followers…. This is worth about 30b if they were all on you own social media…

Twtr thru Trump off he had almost 100m subs while whole twtr had 200m….

So Trump has no choice but Musk doesn’t just want to walk away from his 80m subs without at least trying to buy twtr out to retain them…

Trump is up to 955k subs over at his Truth social so he has taken since Feb 21 to get only 1% of his twtr subs back…

Musk knows he has value in his 80m twtr subs…

Matt Franko said...

Trump now up to 960k subs over at Truth he is only onboarding about 20k per day last few days…

Going to take 5,000 days to get his 100m subs back …. At this rate..,

Not an insignificant task… Musk can avoid it if he can take twtr private…

Peter Pan said...

His next best move is to delete his Twitter account. His followers have no incentive to do anything if he keeps his Twitter account.

But public figures are loathe to give up that amount of exposure.

Peter Pan said...

Why is this considered important?
Free speech implies speech, rather than Twitteresque quips.

Peter Pan said...

And having to rely on the ideological leanings of a billionaire to keep free speech is a less than optimal situation...

Tom Hickey said...

Why is this considered important?
Free speech implies speech, rather than Twitteresque quips.


Not in the US. Free speech is interpreted broadly by the courts.

The right to free speech includes other methods of expression that communicates a message. As new methods of communication are developed, they have presented unique challenges to First Amendment doctrine.

https://definitions.uslegal.com/f/freedom-of-speech/

However, the Bill of rights only applies to government in the US. The question is what influence the government has on other venues. The Scott Ritter-Don DeBar interview I put up today goes into that.

Ritter claims that the government has a huge amount of influence behind the scenes and he gives instances from his own experience. Anecdotal maybe, but it leads one to think that this is pretty pervasive.

America's governance is based on corporate statism, a form of oligarchy that falls under plutonomy. That's what neoliberalism is.

Tom Hickey said...

And having to rely on the ideological leanings of a billionaire to keep free speech is a less than optimal situation...

Yes, another reminder that money is the most powerful from of expression, which is deadly for genuine democracy.

Tom Hickey said...

Note also that the right to freedom of expression is not absolute in the US. There are instances where the courts have decided that government can legitimately prohibit expression.

Private speech is also limited civilly, e.g., by libel laws.

Peter Pan said...

If Twitter were an essential service, then it could be regulated.

Net neutrality on behalf on ISPs is far more important than these squabbles.

Ritter claims that the government has a huge amount of influence behind the scenes and he gives instances from his own experience. Anecdotal maybe, but it leads one to think that this is pretty pervasive.

Then don't use those services.
The apathy of consumers is such that governments can get away with indirect censorship.

Peter Pan said...

In Canada, whether public or private, the mainstream media are state propaganda outlets. That in itself has destroyed free speech in the country.

Peter Pan said...

Of the platforms I'm aware of, only LinkedIn and Substack are worthy of being designated essential services.

I would add video/podcast hosting sites as forming part of a media commons. Those venues however, would have to conform to 'community standards'. There would have to be restrictions and segregation for pornography and other obscene material. The criteria would be what is/isn't social commentary. What is deemed to be journalistic, versus entertainment.

Twitter, FaceBook and the like are entertainment venues. They were not designed to facilitate the free exchange of ideas. They are designed to facilitate dopamine hits, and socially unproductive behavior.

Matt Franko said...

TWTR is what’s called a “microblogging site”…

I find it VERY useful to quickly keep informed of current developments in topic areas I’m interested in…

All you have to do is take a few seconds to thumb thru your TL a few times a day and get the gist of what is going on.. within the topic areas you are interested in…

Peter Pan said...

An RSS feed can do the same.

Tom Hickey said...

Twitter, FaceBook and the like are entertainment venues. They were not designed to facilitate the free exchange of ideas. They are designed to facilitate dopamine hits, and socially unproductive behavior.

Agree, which is why I spend little time on them, Twitter less than FB where I stay in touch with some friends and also belong to some interest groups related to non-political matters of interest to me, including MMT.

However, both these sites are highly influential politically, so deplatforming makes a difference. How many of SR's followers will bother to follow him on Telegram? Chris Hedges was deplatformed at YouTube. Yeah, he could post his archives and new posts at Rumble, but again the reach is not there.

Deplatfofming is highly effective in narrative control.

Matt Franko said...


An RSS feed can do the same.”

It’s not the same or as easy

Peter Pan said...

It’s not the same or as easy

Okay boomer :)