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The NYT Illusion

Ever get the feeling you’re not being given the whole story?

This post was mainly cooked up yesterday, inspired by this NYT graphic.

Where’s Rishi?

Oh here is, talking to Elon Musk

Why would the owners of the NYT not want to put Rishi in such a graphic?

Maybe because they’re dependent on the idea that a Brown British Tory leader would have to be an imperialist adjacent centrist like Obama as opposed to a leftie like Jeremy Corbyn or a right wing politician like the people in the image.

Another question to ask is where is Ursula Von der Leyen?

It’s been clear to me for a year that she is the EU’s far-right candidate to run the European Commission – if you know of any rivals do say.

More Zionist propaganda from the NYT here as its readers are asked to continue pretending that Israel is not committing war crimes on a daily basis. The idea that “fighting has broken out in Gaza” when, in fact, Israel has invaded and for long time 100% controlled everything that comes in and out of the area. Also the line about 300,000 Gazans fleeing Rafah says nothing about the fact that many are babies and children who by no stretch of imagination have anything to do with terrorism or war crimes.

A chaotic night at UCLA raises questions about police response – again this is as pro-Zionist as you can get without directly saying so. The man in the image was physically violent against non violent protestors but was not arrested despite there being lots of evidence of his crimes. LA is the home of Hollywood where Quentin Tarantino (who now lives in Israel) and his buddy Harvey Weinstein (currently in jail in New York where his conviction was overturned and he now faces a retrial and avoiding being extradited to California where he was sentenced to 16 years) once ruled the roost.

Few of the articles about the 30th anniversary of pulp fiction mentioned that its producer Weinstein is in jail and Tarantino is in Israel

Apocalypse Now vibes with Cypress Hill :

Dave Pike’s Latin American sounding Jazz with breaks and sitars…

NYT