
A war foretold: how the CIA and MI6 got hold of Putin’s Ukraine plans and why nobody believed them: It is the story of a spectacular intelligence success, but also one of several intelligence failures. First, for the CIA and MI6, who got the invasion scenario right but failed to accurately predict the outcome, assuming a swift Russian takeover was a foregone conclusion. More profoundly, for European services, who refused to believe a full-scale war in Europe was possible in the 21st century. They remembered the dubious intelligence case presented to justify the invasion of Iraq two decades previously, and were wary of trusting the Americans on what seemed like a fantastical prediction.
Loblaw-owned Superstore fined $10K for promoting imported food as Canadian
On 23 August 2001, the Mossad gave the CIA a list of 19 suspects living in the US who were believed to be mounting an imminent attack on the United States. Only four of the names are known, all belonging to eventual hijackers in the attacks — Mohamed Atta, Marwan al-Shehhi, Khalid al-Mihdhar, and Nawaf al-Hazmi — and it is not known if the list had 19 names by coincidence or if it had all the hijackers who would partake in the attacks. - Wikipedia
47 (1) Every one who commits high treason is guilty of an indictable offence and shall be sentenced to imprisonment for life. - Canadian Criminal Code
Fantasy isn’t the opposite of reality or merely escapism. In a Lacanian sense it is what organizes and allows us to make sense of reality. It provides the coordinates through which we experience desire, relationships, ourselves. Slavoj Zizek used Lacan to analyze what made Daphne Du Maurier’s Rebecca—a classic early-20th century gothic romance novel—so memorable. It employs an ancient female fantasy cliche that could be found in some form in the spine of many contemporary trashy romance/erotica books: a rather plain-looking young woman is swept off her pedestrian feet by a brooding wealthy older man and is the inexplicable key to healing his troubled past. Zizek points out that Du Maurier, compared to the traditional literary canon, writes in an embarrassingly direct and often melodramatic style—yet her stories carry a hypnotic and captivating effect. He argues that her relatively unsophisticated directness has the effect of a gramophone; an old recording with its scratches sound more real to us than a perfect digital remastered replication…The masochistic content serves a diagnostic or therapeutic function rather than a libidinal one. This is precisely what makes them genuinely transgressive—they force the audience to confront the psychic reality underneath the fantasy rather than offering the fantasy as a consumable pleasure. - Dwyer
Digital music works much differently. A digital kit cannot read analogue soundwaves, they are translated into a digital signal and back into analogue again, meaning some information is lost or approximated in the process. With vinyl, every single part of the analogue wave is captured in those grooves, making it the only true lossless format. - Science Focus

“There are 19,000 private equity funds in the US. There are 14,000 McDonald’s in the US. How are there more private equity funds than McDonald’s? That’s actually crazy, right?” KKR & Co. partner Alisa Wood said Wednesday at Bloomberg’s Women, Money and Power event in London. “Capital coming back is really important. The mark-to-market paper gains only take you so far.” - Bloomberg
“Is Iran the reason that no one can afford a house? Is Iran the reason that there's fentanyl everywhere? … When your insurance won't cover a knee operation … is your main concern Iran? This is the craziest sh*t I've ever heard.” - Tim Dillon
The political problem that we suffer from is not our adherence to ideological fantasies that promise us an enjoyment that is false or unattainable. The political struggle does not involve an effort to escape the pull that fantasy has over us so that we can look at the situation as it really is. Although fantasy is a political trap, it is also the key to emancipation. But in order for fantasy to be emancipatory, we must approach it in the manner of film noir, which allows fantasy to infiltrate every aspect of the filmic world that it depicts. When we take this step, the ideological valence of fantasy undergoes a complete revolution…“One thing that capitalism cannot function with is people that accept that failure is itself success. Because you have to be bent upon success in order to be a good capitalist subject. If you accept that 'I'm never going to get that object I desire,' then you are no longer seduced by accumulation or advertising.” - McGowan Mainstreaming Fantasy: Politics Without Reserve

(Could we not say the same also about how a subject’s sexual identity is formed? It (mostly) “collapses” into a particular form (gay, hetero man, lesbian…), but to understand how this form emerged we have to accept that the subject enacted all possible forms, and that these “superposed” forms continue to echo in the final form.[2]) Alenka Zupančič wrote: “In theatre, we start with ‘repetitions,’ for rehearsals are called repetitions, and we end up with la première, with the first (performance or the first night). Repetitions do not repeat some first occurrence but, rather, lead up to it.”[3] Can we say, in a similar way, that wave superpositions are like theatrical repetitions which prepare the (back)ground for the premiere in their collapse?…This means that we shouldn’t imagine the Big Bang as a singularity that then explodes but as a primordial fuzziness in which time bends into space - Philosophical Salon

The Democratic Republic of Congo added the rebel-held Rubaya coltan mine, one of the world’s richest tantalum deposits, to a shortlist of strategic assets it is offering to the US under a minerals cooperation framework, a government document seen by Reuters shows. - Mining.com
The Hyperwar Imperative: As explained by Professor Ashley Deeks of the University of Virginia School of Law, “hyperwar” refers to a future conflict where the speed of attacks — hypersonic missiles, autonomous drone swarms, cyber volleys — is so fast that machines will have to make most of the decisions. Humans, with their biological processing limits, will become the bottleneck. In such an environment, milliseconds matter. The side with the most advanced, integrated, and unrestricted AI will likely prevail. - Frame the Globe News
Feb 18 (Reuters) - The Trump administration plans to loosen restrictions on coal-burning power plants this week, allowing them to emit more hazardous pollutants including mercury, the New York Times reported on Wednesday. - Yahoo
(M)aybe some people will be happy enough with what AI can produce, and some will not. But I think the main problem for the moving image industry today is the concentration of capital. And the concentration of capital is the problem for every industry, for humanity. AI is nothing without the men behind it. AI is owned by the tech barons standing right behind power." - Stellen Skarsgard
Sara Qudah of the Committee to Protect Journalists tells NPR how Palestinian journalists were bound, hung for hours, raped, starved, and denied medical care in Israeli prisons. She says 80% of the 58 journalists interviewed were never charged. CPJ received no response from Israeli authorities and is demanding the release of 30 journalists who are currently jailed, and an independent investigation into torture and sexual violence. - Dropsite
On January 3, 2026, Tim Stern, a German investor, was sleeping peacefully at his Venezuela residence when the phone on his small bedside table suddenly went wild. As he explained to Timothy Allen of the “Free Cities Podcast,” calls streamed in immediately after news broke that the United States had bombed Caracas in the early hours of the morning. Within hours, it was clear that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro had been captured and was being sent to the United States — a change, Stern said in the podcast, that “is going to be the start of an absolute bonanza here in Venezuela.” Stern is not involved in the oil industry. Instead, he’s the co-founder of a blockchain-based residential settlement called CryptoCity, a luxury real estate development spanning 35 hectares on Venezuela’s Margarita Island. Margarita, an island with duty-free port status and a population of around 490,000, depends largely on the tourism industry and has suffered hardships due to Venezuela’s economic crisis. However, CryptoCity is promoted to German and other foreign investors as a highly exclusive enclave. It boasts of luxury living for “high net-worth” entrepreneurs fully vetted and selected through a rigorous process. All transactions in the zone must be made in crypto, and residents form part of a “brain pool”..Early in Trump’s second term, a rising network state project called Praxis — in fact a self-proclaimed “network empire” — enthusiastically backed Trump’s resolve to annex Greenland from Denmark, declaring plans to make it the first physical site for their digital nation. A week after Trump’s election, Praxis co-founder Dryden Brown announced that he had visited Greenland “to try to buy it.” Meanwhile Trump’s support for “Freedom Cities” within the United States (later named “Acceleration Zones”), an offshoot of Honduras’s Economic Development and Employment Zones (ZEDEs) like Próspera, moved from a campaign promise to official policy. - Truthout



































