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Trudeau Vs. Modi in the Punjabi Gang Wars (I hope you’re sitting down)

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Fr0m The Real Story 

By Terry Glavin

Also, it’s official: Samidoun is a terrorist organization and Khaled Barakat is officially a terrorist (thank you, America). This has been a hell of a week.

Spies in the House!

I’ve just come from the Montreal International Security Summit on China and the Indo-Pacific where I joined the Globe and Mail’s Bob Fife and Yaqiu Wang from Freedom House on a panel titled Decoding Transnational Repression and Foreign Influence Operations. CPAC recorded the summit. When the video clips are available I’ll post them here.

At the moment I’m in Ottawa, where all everybody seems to be talking about whether Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has finally and fatally beclowned himself by his melodramatic performance at Madame Justice Hogue’s Foreign Influence Inquiry hearings this past week.

If you’re interested in that sort of thing here’s some reading for when you’re done here: Trudeau’s interference allegations a dramatic act of self-preservation; Trudeau the Magnificent offers foreign-interference inquiry a master class in redirecting attentionTrudeau came to the foreign interference inquiry to hurl a grenade at his opponent.

On the allegation that Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre doesn’t want to know who’s among the compromised politicians identified in that secret report of the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians, come back when you’re done reading this newsletter and give a listen to former New Democratic Party leader Tom Mulcair, here.

As for Trudeau’s headline-grabbing assertion that the Conservatives have a serious foreign-influence problem that party leader Pierre Poilievre doesn’t want to talk about (Poilievre minced no words, calling Trudeau a liar and demanding that he name names), it will not come as news to Real Story subscribers or to readers acquainted with my contributions to the National Post that yes, the Conservatives have a problem.

It’s nothing like the Liberals’ circumstances of course, the main difference being that Trudeau’s Liberals don’t see Beijing’s lavish dotings to their electoral advantage in the federal polls of 2019 and 2021 as particularly unwelcome. Trudeau has never given any indication that he finds anything unseemly about the affections of Beijing’s Mandarin bloc donors and deal-makers in Canada.

Teenagers who aren’t even Canadian citizens or permanent residents, mobilized en masse to vote in Liberal Party candidacy and leadership races? Sure, let them in, Trudeau told the Hogue Commission: “Expanding the pool is also a way to try to engage future voters – those too young to vote or who are not yet Canadian citizens.”

The Conservatives have had their own entanglements. See: Conservatives, the Media and CCP Psy-Ops for a link-rich deep background piece on the whole thing. This was pretty important too: The Comprador in the Conservative leadership race keeps digging. Here’s the bedrock Jean Charest is about to hit.

Now that Canada’s diplomatic relations with India are broken …

There’s been so much going on in my “beat” this week that I need to try hard not to bog everyone down here. Below I’ll have some news for you that you’re unlikely to have come across anywhere else, related to my front page piece in the National Post, here.

Certain incendiary facts related to the Canada-India rumpus will have to wait for subsequent Real Story editions, but I do have some riveting details below about the sinister Indian intelligence-agency spymaster who Canada is determined to shold accountable for Hardeep Singh Nijjar’s murder in Surrey in June last year. Let’s just say he doesn’t fit the profile.

For now, riddle me this.

The crime gang that the RCMP says Delhi has contracted to carry out its dirty counter-terrorism operations against Khalistani extremists here in Canada is the Lawrence Bishnoi crime syndicate. “We believe that that group is connected to agents of the Government of India,” Assistant RCMP Commissioner Brigitte Gauvin said Monday.

But in India, law enforcement agencies are engaged in a long and drawn-out war with the Bishnoi gang, and Narendra Modi’s people say they’re furious that Canada isn’t helping. Ottawa won’t even respond to extradition requests. India’s National Investigation Agency says Bishnoi’s mobsters have been directly collaborating with the Khalistanis in various criminal enterprises, and they’ve been running extortion, kidnapping and gun-running operations in India from their safe havens in Canada.

The NIA prepared a charge sheet against several Bishnoi gangsters last year setting out their various ties to Babbar Khalsa International, a listed Khalistani terrorist organization in Canada. Talwinder Singh Parmar’s Babbar Khalsa organization was behind the murder of 329 passengers in the 1985 Air India atrocity, which was plotted and carried out in Canada under the noses of the RCMP.

Bishnoi has been in prison for a decade, but Indian police agencies say his operations across the Indian subcontinent are run from Canada by his chief lieutenant, the gangster Goldy Brar. It’s not that Bishnoi or Brar are devoted Khalistanis; they’re devoted to guns, money and power.

For as much background as you could possibly want on the suffering of the Sikhs and the harms done by Khalistani extremists over four decades in Canada and India, there’s quite a bit in the Real Story archives.

Of immediate relevance: Politics and The Punjabi Gangland Wars

Introductory dispatches: Why I know where the bodies are buried.

Part 1: Is India interfering in Canada’s affairs or is it the other way round?

Part 2: Did Ottawa Sabotage Modi’s Peace Talks?

Part 3: Conspiracy Theories, From Inside The House.

More recently: The worst of all possible worldsDefiling the memory of dead Canadians; The worst mass murder in Canadian history.

As you may have picked up from my tone. I’m not fond of the Khalistanis. They killed a friend of mine, among several thousand others. Follow those links above and you’ll understand.

Speaking of lurid Khalistani conspiracy theories and defiling the memory of the Air India dead, Liberal MP Sukh Dhaliwal is sponsoring a petition for an inquiry to entertain allegations that the Government of India itself blew up Air India Flight 182 to make Khalistani separatists look bad.

India Strikes Back: ‘You want names? Here are some names.’

Furious with Trudeau’s refusal to cooperate with its own counter-terrorism and organized crime investigations, this week India released the names of several Khalistanis and gangsters from a list of extradition requests that Ottawa has allegedly ignored.

The Bishnoi boss Goldy Brar is just one of them. Another, who I knew only by his alias “Sunny Toronto” until a couple of day ago, is reportedly a Canadian Border Services Agency official who lives in Abbotsford, B.C.; In the cause of discretion I’ll leave his name and address out of it for the time being.

Ottawa’s got the list now.

Ujjal Dosanjh, the former NDP B.C. premier and Liberal MP makes an astute observation: India-Canada relations are likely to remain broken until both Trudeau and Modi are gone. Ujjal and I go way back. The Khalistanis beat him within an inch of his life back in the 1980s.

Dosanjh is not impressed with the way Trudeau and his ministers are grandstanding about what Indian spies may or may not be doing in Canada: “Why do they have to say anything? Why, in particular, when they say nothing about Khalistani extremism in the first place?”

Speaking of the Trudeau government’s astonishing inattentiveness to fanatical extremists engaging in incitements and intimidations and coming and going from Canada as they please. . .

An excruciatingly embarassing Canadian moment.

I was airborne on the first leg of the long haul to the Montreal Summit when the news broke. CBC version: Canada lists pro-Palestinian group Samidoun as terrorist entity.

(I’m not going to bang on again about how describing Samidoun as “pro-Palestinian” in a headline is an unfortunate case of the news media once again conceding the specious claim Samidoun makes for itself against the case that it should have been outlawed years ago, so let’s just move on).

During a brief stopover in Vancouver I checked my phone, and holy cow. The emails, text messages, phone messages. . .then my phone started ringing. I’d turned down a half dozen interviews before the day was over.

It all began here, in April, 2022, with this investigation: The Curious Case of Khaled Barakat. It carried on until just a few days ago: Liberal failure to outlaw pro-terrorist group Samidoun is mind boggling

In between,there was a lot of this sort of thing: Why was man linked to terrorist group allowed to speak at city-owned Ottawa venue? Group banned in Germany gets carte blanche in Canada to glorify Hamas massacreFinally, a terrorist sympathiser is arrested.

Necessary reading for anyone who wants the deep backstory: Samidoun: The Network.

I’m not due any great part of the credit for Samidoun’s ill luck, although I’d like think that all that research and all those interviews and investigations and fact-checking shifts for the National Post and the Ottawa Citizen and The Real Story going back two and a half years have amounted to something worthwhile.

Credit for Samidoun’s comeuppance this week genuinely belongs elsewhere. It belongs to the terrific research staff and the leadership of the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, NGO Monitor, B’nai Brith, Friends of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights . . . and in the House of Commons, Michael Chong, Shuv Majumdar, Kevin Vuong, Jamil Jivani, Anthony Housefather, and lately Pierre Poilievre.

I better stop there or it’ll be a long list and I’ll leave someone off and feel bad. Mostly I’d like to thank the paying subscribers to The Real Story, where I’ve done most of my work on this file. I wouldn’t have been able to do it without you, so take a bow.

The Real Story is made possible by paying subscribers who get all sorts of news backstories otherwise unavailable anywhere.

Why can’t we call this a proud Canadian moment?

Let me put it this way.

In effect as of last Friday, the U.S. Treasury Department has designated a federally-registered Canadian non-profit corporation a “sham charity” that has been covertly and openly serving a Foreign Terrorist Organization listed by the U.S. State Department, for years, specifically the Specially Designated Global Terrorist organization known as the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

Let that sink in. The Americans were forced to list one of Canada’s federally-registered non-profits as a terrorist entity. The PFLP has been on Canada’s own terrorist list all this time, too, and for several years, to no avail, Jewish advocacy organizations and Israeli diplomats had been hammering away to bring Samidoun to Ottawa’s attention.

Washington agreed to present this turn of events as a collaboration with Ottawa, and that’s fine. Diplomacy and all that. Canadian and American officials have been chatting for a year about how to get this mess sorted, but by last week the Americans were done waiting. Canada had to act swiftly.

Here’s something odd about Ottawa’s account: Samidoun meets the definition of a ‘terrorist group’ under Canada’s Criminal Code,” following Germany’s decision to do just that. Israel isn’t mentioned. Maybe that’s because Samidoun was registered with Corporations Canada as a non-profit corporation a mere three days after Israel listed Samidoun as a terrorist group and about two years after Ottawa was first warned that the PFLP was using Canada as a base of operations through Samidoun.

It was just as the financial, insurance and fundraising walls were closing in on the organization, globally, that Ottawa threw Samidoun a lifeline, on March 3, 2021.

Samidoun appears to remain a federally-registered non-profit, although its Corporations Canada page includes a note: “Government of Canada lists Samidoun as a terrorist entity.” At least as of Wednesday, Samidoun shows up on Public Safety Canada’s list of proscribed terrorist groups.

There’s an important distinction between the Americans’ listing announcement and Canada’s move. Here’s the U.S. Treasury Department: “Also designated today is Khaled Barakat, a member of the PFLP’s leadership. Together, Samidoun and Barakat play critical roles in external fundraising for the PFLP.” The Government of Canada is silent about Barakat.

A Palestinian from the West Bank town of Dahiyat al-Barid, Barakat is a Canadian citizen now. He first showed up in Canada at the University of British Columbia about 20 years ago. At some point along the way Barakat married the insufferable American immigrant Charlotte Kates, the Samidoun rally-organizer, international coordinator and slogan shouter arrested on hate-speech charges in April. Unaccountably, the B.C. Prosecution Service is still fussing and mulling and dragging its feet: no prosecution, six months on.

Barakat was last noticed in Beirut where he was livestreaming a conversation with Laith Marouf, the grossly antisemitic apologist for Syria’s Bashar Assad who famously siphoned hundreds of thousands of dollars in federal “anti-racism” and broadcasting consultation contracts before anyone in Ottawa even noticed.

Back to the India-Canada dyspepsia.

What does Justin Trudeau mean by proof?

I’m reluctant to include Monday’s extraordinary RCMP press conference among the several exercises in diversionary stage-management that Team Trudeau undertook this past week. But I do wonder.

The big headlines from that presser involved the RCMP’s conclusion that there are “links” between Indian diplomats and certain of the outrages that have occurred in a crime wave of extortion, arson, and strongarming in the South Asian community over the past year or so. The upshot is that Delhi is using the crime wave as cover to go after Khalistanis in Canada who are wanted India, and there are even “links tying agents of the Government of India to homicides.”

It’s certainly plausible. As Real Story subscribers will know, for quite some time now Narendra Modi’s government has been furious about the Trudeau government’s reluctance to tread on the toes of powerful Khalistani elements that have embedded themselves in Canada’s Sikh temples. It’s all “vote bank politics,” the Indians say.

The RCMP has concluded that Delhi’s overseas counter-terrorism efforts have come to include going after the gangs on their own turf according to gang rules. Delhi’s frustration involves at least two dozen high-profile criminals and Khalistanis in Canada who are wanted in India in several serious criminal and terrorism cases. India says they continue to run their gangland empires across the Indian subcontinent from their safe havens here in Canada.

Despite the impression Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly set out to give in her account of the expulsion of India’s High Commissioner and five diplomats this week, RCMP Commissioner Mike Duheme and Assistant RCMP Commissioner Brigitte Gauvin said the bad behaviour they were on about in their press briefing had nothing to do with the murder of Hardeep Singh Nijjar.

And despite Joly’s version, India says its embassy and consular officials were withdrawn for their own safety because Trudeau himself, by his florid language and grandstanding, had put them at risk.

Canada’s foot-stamping, tantrum-having approach has been avoided by the Americans, who report that Indian officials are being perfectly cooperative in the case that caused Trudeau to stand up in the House of Commons last September to accuse Modi of killing a Canadian on Canadian soil. That wasn’t a stunt quite on the scale of lowering the flags on all government buildings quY

Unlike the case of Hardeep Singh Nijjar’s murder, the possibly-related plot to kill Nijjar’s Sikhs for Justice associate Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, foiled by the Federal Bureau of Investigations and the Drug Enforcement Agency, is coming along swimmingly.

The only fleeting evidence of an Indian government agent’s involvement in Nijjar’s murder comes from the transcipts the U.S. Department of Justice put together from wiretaps in the comically compromised murder-for-hire plot to kill Pannun – of the five people who were in on it, one was an FBI agent and another was a DEA informant.

Trudeau himself conceded to the Hogue Commission Tuesday that he had no proof of the Indian government’s involvement in the Nijjar murder, that he had only “intelligence” suggesting an Indian government connection. As you might imagine, the news media in India jumped on Trudeau’s deposition with glee.

The Department of Justice transcipt contains an exchange between the gangster Nikhil Gupta (now in U.S. custody) and his prospective hit man (who was in reality an FBI agent) in which Gupta describes Nijjar as one of several targets in an anti-Khalistani assassination scheme with big payouts.

The money man in the arrangement has turned out to be something rather less than a movie-script spy chief. Vikash Yadav, a disreputable former RAW officer, was himself arrested by Delhi police on extortion, attempted murder and kidnapping charges last December.

In an amateurish shakedown, Yadav and an accomplice beat a Lodhi Road businessman, relieved him of his cash, a gold chain and his rings, and left him at the side of the road. Yadav was arrested soon after by the Delhi police, but he was allowed out on bail four months later, in April, and hasn’t been seen since. The FBI has issued a warrant for his arrest, and the U.S. is expected to ask for his extradition if he turns up.

It’s astonishing that something so tawdry could lead to Canada’s worst fracture in diplomatic relations with a fellow democracy in living memory. But this is Justin Trudeau’s Canada, and this is how we roll.

By the time you read this I should be airborne again. I’m tired.

Not a paywall to be found in this whole newsletter. I can only blame myself, but if you’ve come this far, you really should take out a paid subscription, right?

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Business

Trump’s government efficiency department plans to cut $500 Billion in unauthorized expenditures, including funding for Planned Parenthood

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From LifeSiteNews

By Emily Mangiaracina

Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy shared their plans to ‘take aim’ at ‘500 billion plus’ in federal expenses, including ‘nearly $300 million’ to ‘progressive groups like Planned Parenthood.’

Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy are planning to ax taxpayer funding for Planned Parenthood as part of their forthcoming work for the next Trump administration, they revealed in a Wednesday op-ed in The Wall Street Journal. 

The businessmen have been appointed by President Donald Trump to lead a new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which will work from outside the official government structure to cut wasteful government spending and excess regulations, as well as “restructure federal agencies,” as Trump announced last week on Truth Social.

Musk and Ramaswamy shared Wednesday that as part of their work at DOGE to downsize government spending, they will be “taking aim at the $500 billion plus in annual federal expenditures that are unauthorized by Congress or being used in ways that Congress never intended,” thereby “delivering cost savings for taxpayers.”

They specifically called out Planned Parenthood as one institution that will lose taxpayer funding once DOGE kicks into gear. In their op-ed, the duo said the federal expenditures they plan on cutting includes the “nearly $300 million” dedicated “to progressive groups like Planned Parenthood.”

Musk and Ramaswamy also reportedly will take aim at the “$535 million a year to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and $1.5 billion for grants to international organizations,” according to Catholic Vote, although they have not shared all of the federal spending they plan to cut or reduce.

“With a decisive electoral mandate and a 6-3 conservative majority on the Supreme Court, DOGE has a historic opportunity for structural reductions in the federal government,” the business duo wrote. “We are prepared for the onslaught from entrenched interests in Washington. We expect to prevail.”

Mogul and X owner Musk, who was outspoken before his DOGE appointment about the big problem of waste, noted last week that if the government is not made efficient, the country will go “bankrupt.”

He reposted a clip from a recent talk he gave in which he explained that not only is our defense budget “pretty gigantic” — a trillion dollars —but the interest the U.S. now owes on its debt is higher than this.

“This is not sustainable. That’s why we need the Department of Government Efficiency,” Musk said.

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Censorship Industrial Complex

Congressional investigation into authors of ‘Disinformation Dozen’ intensifies

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From LifeSiteNews

By Dr. Michael Nevradakis of The Defender

The Center for Countering Digital Hate, authors of ‘The Disinformation Dozen,’ faces a Nov. 21 deadline to provide Congress with documents related to its alleged collusion with the Biden administration and social media platforms to censor online users.

The Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), authors of the “Disinformation Dozen,” faces a Nov. 21 deadline to provide Congress with documents related to its alleged collusion with the Biden administration and social media platforms to censor online users.

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, on Nov. 7 subpoenaed CCDH  as part of an ongoing congressional investigation, launched in August 2023, into the nonprofit’s censorship-related activities.

The subpoena requests all communications and documents “between or among CCDH, the Executive Branch, or third parties, including social media companies, relating to the identification of groups, accounts, channels, or posts for moderation, deletion, suppression, restriction, or reduced circulation.”

The subpoena also requests all records, notes, and other “documents of interactions between or among CCDH and the Executive Branch referring or relating to ‘killing’ or taking adverse action against Elon Musk’s X social media platform (formerly Twitter).”

 

CCDH previously included Kennedy on its “Disinformation Dozen” list, published in March 2021, of the 12 “leading online anti-vaxxers.”

Leaked CCDH documents released last month by investigative journalists Paul D. Thacker and Matt Taibbi revealed that CCDH sought to “kill” Twitter and launch “black ops” against Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President-elect Donald J. Trump’s nominee for secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

Black ops” are defined as a “secret mission or campaign carried out by a military, governmental or other organization, typically one in which the organization conceals or denies its involvement.”

A subsequent report by Taibbi and Thacker showed that CCDH employed tactics it initially developed to help U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and the U.S. Democratic Party, to target Musk, Kennedy and others.

CCDH used ‘explicit military terminology’ to target speech

Thacker told The Defender the leaked documents “definitely spurred” Jordan’s subpoena.

Sayer Ji, the founder of GreenMedInfo, was also listed among “The Disinformation Dozen.” He said the leaked documents were “chilling” and that CCDH’s efforts were part of “the largest coordinated foreign influence operation targeting American speech since 1776.”

Ji told The Defender:

The leaked documents confirm what we experienced firsthand: CCDH wasn’t just targeting 12 individuals – we were test cases for deploying military-grade psychological operations against civilians at scale.

Just as the British Crown once used seditious libel laws to silence colonial dissent, CCDH’s operation expanded to silence hundreds of millions globally, from doctors sharing clinical observations to parents discussing vaccine injuries.

Ohio physician Dr. Sherri Tenpenny, also on “The Disinformation Dozen” list, told The Defender, “The exposure of the manipulation that went on behind the scenes to silence us is what we suspected, and now we know … We have the sad last laugh against their attacks. They are the ones with blood on their hands.”

Ji said CCDH’s internal communications reveal not just bias, “but explicit military terminology – ‘black ops,’ ‘target acquisition,’ ‘strategic deployment’ – coordinated between Five Eyes networks and dark money interests to target constitutionally protected speech.”

Writing on GreenMedInfo, Ji said, “CCDH’s ‘black ops’ approach includes coordinated media smears, economic isolation, and digital censorship.” Ji said CCDH’s activities represent “a new level of institutionalized power directed at civilian targets, often bypassing constitutional safeguards.”

Thacker said Jordan’s investigation should expand to include CCDH’s “black ops.”

“I don’t want to speculate on what CCDH was doing with ‘black ops’ against Kennedy,” Thacker said. “I think that should be explored by a congressional committee, with CCDH CEO Imran Ahmed put under oath,” Thacker said.

CCDH facing multiple lawsuits, possible Trump administration investigation

Jordan’s subpoena is the latest in a series of legal challenges for CCDH. According to GreenMedInfo, the organization faces several lawsuits and government investigations.

Following last month’s CCDH document leak, the Trump campaign said an investigation into CCDH “will be at the top of the list.”

The campaign also filed a complaint against the Harris campaign with the Federal Election Commission, “for making and accepting illegal foreign national contributions” – namely, from the U.K. Labour Party.

This followed the release of evidence indicating that the Biden administration coordinated with the U.K. Foreign Office as part of what GreenMedInfo described “as a systematic censorship regime involving CCDH and affiliated organizations.”

lawsuit Musk filed against CCDH in July 2023 for allegedly illegally obtaining data and using it in a “scare campaign” to deter advertisers from X will likely proceed on appeal. A federal court initially dismissed the lawsuit in March.

Discovery in the Missouri v. Biden free speech lawsuit may also “shed further light and legal scrutiny on the critical role that CCDH played in allegedly suppressing and violating the civil liberties of U.S. citizens,” according to GreenMedInfo.

CCDH, others flee X in protest

Earlier this week, CCDH deleted its account on X, the platform it wanted to “kill.”

Writing on Substack, Ji said CCDH’s departure from X, during the same week Trump nominated Kennedy to lead HHS, represents a “seismic shift” and marks “a watershed moment, signaling the unraveling of entrenched systems of control and the rise of a new era for health freedom and open discourse.”

Several other left-leaning organizations and individuals, including The Guardian and journalist Don Lemon, also said they will stop using X, after Trump tapped Musk to lead a federal agency tasked with increasing government efficiency.

According to NBC News, many ordinary users are also fleeing X, citing “bots, partisan advertisements and harassment, which they all felt reached a tipping point when Donald Trump was elected president last week with Musk’s support.”

But according to Adweek, X’s former top advertisers, including Comcast, IBM, Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery and Lionsgate Entertainment, resumed ad spending on the platform this year, but at “much lower rates” than before.

“Elon Musk’s ties with Donald Trump might spur some advertisers to think spending on X is good for business,” Adweek reported.

Thacker said CCDH’s deletion of its X account was “aligned” with the departure of “other organizations and ‘journalists’ aligned with the Democratic Party.” He said it appears to have been a “coordinated protest.”

Ji said organizations like CCDH view X “as an existential threat.” He added:

Having experienced both Twitter 1.0’s AI-driven censorship system and X’s more open environment, I understand exactly why CCDH sees X as an existential threat. X represents what Twitter 1.0’s embedded censorship infrastructure was designed to prevent: a truly free digital public square.

Under Musk’s commitment to free speech, their tactical advantage disappeared. They’re not leaving because X is toxic. They’re leaving because they can’t control it.

Online censorship ‘may no longer be sustainable under intensified scrutiny’

According to GreenMedInfo, CCDH’s departure from X “appears to reflect an internal recognition that their operational model – characterized by critics as a US-U.K. intelligence ‘cut-out’ facilitating  unconstitutional suppression of civil liberties – may no longer be sustainable under intensified scrutiny.”

In recent months, several mainstream media outlets have corrected stories that relied upon CCDH reports claiming “The Disinformation Dozen” was responsible for up to two-thirds of vaccine-related “misinformation” online.

According to Thacker, this reflects an increasing awareness by such outlets that readers are turning their backs on such reporting.

“The outlets that promoted CCDH propaganda are being investigated by their own readers, who are fleeing in droves. Readers are voting against this type of propaganda by refusing to subscribe to these media outlets,” Thacker said.

Yet, “many outlets continue to host these demonstrably false narratives without correction,” Ji said.

According to Ji, these false narratives resulted in medical professionals fearing the loss of their licenses for expressing non-establishment views, self-censorship among scientists “to avoid career destruction,” suppression of “critical public health discussions” and the labeling of millions of posts as “misinformation.”

“This isn’t just about suppressing speech. It’s about establishing a new form of digital control that echoes the colonial-era suppression our founders fought against,” Ji said.

“CCDH has polluted political discourse by pretending there is some absolute definition of the term ‘misinformation’ and that they hold the dictionary,” Thacker said. “That’s nonsense. They spread hate and misinformation to attack perceived political enemies of the Democratic Party.”

Ji called upon Congress to investigate “The full scope of those silenced beyond the ‘Disinformation Dozen,’” the “systematic suppression of scientific debate,” “media organizations’ role in amplifying foreign influence operations” and “dark money funding networks” supporting such organizations.

Thacker said Congress should examine possible CCDH violations of the Foreign Agents Registration Act. “We need to also look at how much foreign money they took in and whether we as a nation are comfortable with foreign influence trying to alter the law and political discussions.”

“The fight isn’t just about correcting past wrongs or personal vindication. It’s about preserving fundamental rights to free speech and scientific inquiry in the digital age,” Ji said. “If we don’t address this systematic abuse of power, we risk surrendering the very freedoms our founders fought to establish.”

This article was originally published by The Defender – Children’s Health Defense’s News & Views Website. Please consider subscribing to The Defender or donating to Children’s Health Defense.

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