Anonymous ID: 79f92a Aug. 21, 2024, 7:45 p.m. No.21458149   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8154 >>8559 >>8647

Beijing has ‘no intention’ of nuclear arms race with US – foreign ministry

 

China has accused the US of falsely portraying it as a “nuclear threat”

 

Speaking to journalists on Wednesday, Mao said that Beijing was “gravely concerned” with the report. “The US has called China a ‘nuclear threat’ and used it as a convenient pretext for the US to shirk its obligation of nuclear disarmament,” she said.

 

Mao added that the size of China’s nuclear arsenal was “by no means on the same level with the US,” stressing that Beijing “follows a policy of ‘no first use’ of nuclear weapons and always keeps its nuclear capabilities at the minimum level required by national security.” China has “no intention to engage in any form of arms race” with other states, she stated.

 

“It is the US who is the primary source of nuclear threats and strategic risks in the world,” the spokeswoman argued.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/602923-china-reject-nuclear-arms-race/

Anonymous ID: 79f92a Aug. 21, 2024, 7:52 p.m. No.21458178   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8559 >>8647

Israeli Assassinations Are Near-Daily In Lebanon, Airstrikes Reaching Deeper

 

The past several days have seen a significant uptick in rare Israeli airstrikes deep into Lebanese territory, with multiple airstrikes having hit the Bekaa Valley in the country's east.

 

Most of the strikes were late Monday into Tuesday, with the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) describing that fighter jets attacked a "Hezbollah weapons storage facilities in the area of Bekaa Valley in Lebanon" - resulting in massive fireballs lighting up the night sky.

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/israeli-assassinations-are-near-daily-lebanon-airstrikes-reaching-deeper

Anonymous ID: 79f92a Aug. 21, 2024, 7:54 p.m. No.21458189   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8559 >>8647

Google agrees to America’s first newsroom funding deal. It’s already unpopular.

 

The California agreement includes funding for artificial intelligence, a technology many journalists fear could replace their jobs.

 

Google has brokered a first-in-the-nation deal with California lawmakers to direct millions of dollars to local newsrooms, the latest in a series of global efforts to require tech companies to support the journalism they profit from.

 

California emulated a strategy that other countries like Canada have used to try and reverse the journalism industry’s decline as readership migrated online and advertising dollars evaporated. But the California agreement includes a novel – and controversial — element with funding earmarked for artificial intelligence, a technology that many journalists fear could replace their jobs, and it immediately drew sharp criticism from journalists and Democratic lawmakers.

 

Under the deal, the details of which were first reported by POLITICO on Monday, Google and the state of California would jointly contribute money over five years to support local newsrooms, excluding broadcasters, through a “News Transformation Fund” housed at UC Berkeley’s journalism school. Google would give $110 million to journalism initiatives, and the state would kick in $70 million, according to Assemblymember Buffy Wicks, an Oakland Democrat who led negotiations on the deal.

 

The deal would also steer $70 million in private dollars toward the development of artificial intelligence tools through a to-be-established nonprofit, Wicks said, an item that people familiar with the negotiations described as an effort to cultivate tech industry buy-in. Funding for artificial intelligence was not included in earlier legislation from Wicks.

 

Wicks emphasized in an interview with POLITICO that the majority of funds would go toward local California newsrooms, and that the AI component was a small piece of negotiations. Wicks said the aim of the so-called “National AI Accelerator” would be to solve problems across a sector of industries, including journalism, where it could create tools like CalMatters’ Digital Democracy program that uses AI to track state legislation.

 

The deal does not require legislation to implement, Wicks said, adding that her bill was used as leverage to force the conversation. Wicks sees the final agreement as the best way to get money into publishers’ hands quickly, as a controversial law could get tied up in court for years.

 

“If you look at Canada, they passed that over a year ago, and publishers haven’t received a penny from that yet,” Wicks said.

 

But the deal immediately drew wide-ranging criticism — including from fellow Democratic legislators, reflecting a broad perception that Google had wielded its influence to wring favorable terms from Sacramento.

 

Sen. Steve Glazer, a Bay Area Democrat who authored a parallel bill that sought to sustain newsrooms by taxing digital ad revenue, said Google’s contribution was “completely inadequate” and warned the compromise “ undercuts our work towards a longterm solution.” California Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire (D-Sonoma) also questioned the outcome.

 

“We have concerns that this proposal lacks sufficient funding for newspapers and local media, and doesn’t fully address the inequities facing the industry,” McGuire said in a statement.

 

And while the terms placated Google, they divided the journalism sector along lines that parallel fissures within the news industry. The California News Publishers Association offered tepid support for what it called a “first step” toward crafting a sustainable business model.

 

But a journalist union that had championed Wicks’ effort, Media Guild of the West, blasted the deal as a giveaway to Google that would not alter the company’s vast power over newsrooms.

 

“This was just a total rout,” Media Guild of the West President Matt Pearce, a former Los Angeles Times reporter, said. “Google used its monopoly power and held the line.”

 

Wicks responded that she has great respect for the unions, but felt this was the attainable compromise.

 

“I think I’m dealing with the art of the possible,” she said. “This represents, to me, the best case scenario for the moment we’re in. And I would rather take a nearly quarter of a billion dollar deal than nothing.”

 

https://www.politico.com/news/2024/08/21/google-california-newsroom-ai-00174817

Anonymous ID: 79f92a Aug. 21, 2024, 8:11 p.m. No.21458298   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8316 >>8343 >>8559 >>8647

F-35: $2T in 'generational wealth' the military had no right to spend

 

The Joint Strike Fighter had a $200B price tag in 2001, now babies born that year are out of college and the plane is still not ready for prime time

 

On October 26, 2001, Jim Roche, the then Secretary of the Air Force, stood behind the podium in the Pentagon briefing room to announce that Lockheed Martin had won the competition to build the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. Joining him on the stage, were Edward Aldridge, the Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition and Technology, and Gordon England, the Secretary of the Navy.

 

All three took turns at the microphone to tout the Joint Strike Fighter’s anticipated virtues. “The Joint Strike Fighter is a family of highly common, lethal, survivable, supportable, and affordable next generation multirole strike fighter aircraft,” said Aldridge.

 

All these claims have proven to be spurious to a greater or lesser extent in subsequent years as the F-35 program limped through a seemingly endless development process, but none so much as the “affordable” claim. At the time of the announcement, the F-35 was supposed to enter active service in 2008 and the program was expected to cost $200 billion.

 

Nearly 23 years later, the F-35 is officially the most expensive weapon program in history clocking with an anticipated total program cost of $2 trillion and engineers continue to struggle to make the jet work properly with development and procurement costs having more than doubled.

 

The three men who made that announcement were nearing the end of their long careers. Aldridge retired from the government in 2003 and went on to serve on the board of Lockheed Martin. Jim Roche left the Pentagon in 2005 and became the director of Orbital ATK. Gordon England eventually became deputy secretary of defense before retiring in 2009.

 

Through their Joint Strike Fighter decision, these three men committed the United States to spend hundreds of billions of dollars for a program that has proven to be an unmitigated disaster. They created a massive financial obligation that future generations of taxpayers must bear, without the much-touted program having produced any of the actual security benefits it was supposed to bring to the U.S. armed forces.

 

By the time the program’s conceptual flaws became obvious, all three individuals had long since left government service and it was left to an entire generation of their successors to salvage something from the mess they left behind.

 

https://responsiblestatecraft.org/f-35-most-expensive/

Anonymous ID: 79f92a Aug. 21, 2024, 8:18 p.m. No.21458348   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8368 >>8651

Reminder of this cover up

 

https://www.coreysdigs.com/health-science/coverup-as-secret-chinese-biolab-in-california-posed-national-security-risk-fbi-shut-down-investigation-cdc-did-not-cooperate/