Julian Assange was persecuted for over a decade for heroically exposing the criminal organization in Washington, DC. His crime was doing journalism.
by Jeremy R. Hammond | Jun 25, 2024 | Blog
Julian Assange was persecuted for over a decade for heroically exposing the criminal organization in Washington, DC. His crime was doing journalism.
by Kyle Anzalone | Jun 25, 2024 | News
The plea bargain allows the Wikileaks founder to return to Australia after a court date in the Mariana Islands WikiLeaks reports that its founder, Julian Assange, was released from UK prison on bail and is in the process of returning to Australia. Court documents...
by Joseph Solis-Mullen | Jun 25, 2024 | Book Reviews, Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
Christopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall’s How to Run Wars: a Confidential Playbook for the National Security Elite is a sharp, sardonic critique of America's perpetual engagement in wars abroad and the erosion of civil liberties at home. The book, newly published by...
by Kym Robinson | Jun 25, 2024 | Blog
“About Bloody Time,” the common Aussie utters to the news that Assange is now free. They are letting Assange go free, to return to Australia. The condition was that he had to reach a plea deal. Admit he was guilty. A compromise that removes a man from his legal limbo,...
by Kyle Anzalone | Jun 24, 2024 | News
The former American president endorsed France deploying its soldiers to Ukraine Former President Donald Trump said that Ukraine’s membership in the NATO alliance was a major provocation for Moscow and part of the reason Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the...
by Bill Buppert | Jun 24, 2024 | Blog
There will be no more new US icebreakers. There is no capability in the manufacturing base. There are no industrial design talent stacks or ability to build icebreakers that work under government contracts. The shipyard throughput is a little above zero. The Arctic is...
by Dan McKnight | Jun 24, 2024 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
I made the decision to join the United States Armed Forces twice in my life. First, in the early 1990s after school when I enlisted and trained as a U.S. Marine. Then, following the 9/11 attacks, I signed up for the Idaho National Guard and was later deployed to...
by Kym Robinson | Jun 24, 2024 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
In some troubled and dangerous parts of the world right now, any gathering of males inside a designated area could be deemed a legitimate target composed of "fighting age males" or "suspects." The fact that men, or boys for that matter, had come together is enough for...
If you haven't seen The Pentagon Wars, take the time to see one of the only depictions on film of exactly how the Pentagon acquires systems that don't work. The film discussed the insane process of replacing the aging infantry fighting vehicles (IFV) in the US Army in...
I am an artist therefore anything, I produce is art. Or, Anything I produce is accepted as art, therefore I am an artist. I pondered both outcomes, as I walked through the art gallery in the city. A combination of native works, landscapes that captured an Australia...
Executive Director of the Ron Paul Institute, Daniel McAdams, returns to The Kyle Anzalone Show to discuss the latest developments from Donald Trump's trip to the Middle East.
Of me re Syria and Ukraine https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCwwDC8KjeE
The CDC claims that studies have proven “vaccines do not cause autism.” Here’s why that’s not true.
Kelley Beaucar Vlahos is a senior advisor for the Quincy Institute and editorial director at Responsible Statecraft. She comes to QI from The American Conservative, where for three years she served as the magazine’s executive editor.
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