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A note on comment posting at Alethonews

Many readers may be aware of the fact that the ADL has been using AI to locate targets for libel suits.

Alethonews archives have been methodically scoured by AI.

At this time all comments have been removed and no future posts will have comments allowed.

February 17, 2026 Posted by | Civil Liberties, Full Spectrum Dominance | | Comments Off on A note on comment posting at Alethonews

Trump stalls over Iran strike plan, Iran holds all the aces

By Martin Jay | Strategic Culture Foundation | February 17, 2026

Trump has the option of going to war with Iran and receiving much-needed campaign funds from Israel for the midterms – or opting to defy Bibi and facing certain defeat by losing both houses and facing certain impeachment. Can the Iranians save him?

Is Trump serious about going to war with Iran? To understand this, it’s important to examine his relationship with Netanyahu and to see who has the advantage when it comes to dragging the U.S. into a war, and whether Israel can actually be a greater threat to the U.S. than Tehran can ever be.

The trap that Trump is falling into is one where he has little or no wiggle room at all to control the Iran crisis, whereby Israel can threaten him with isolation while it goes ahead with its strike.

There are two dynamics at play here which are struggling to find a compromise. Trump wants a deal with Iran which takes away their nuclear capability, while Israel wants a war which overthrows the Iranian regime and installs a Mossad/CIA puppet. The problem, though, is that Israel is not an honest broker and keeps shifting the goalposts. The latest demand now is that removing Iran’s ballistic missiles should be at the heart of any deal that Trump pulls off.

Trump is ensnared and is aware of how Bibi is manipulating him. He may, on occasion, swear at journalists and pretend he is his own boss and his own president and that Israel is a client state of Washington which has to toe the line, but in reality, it is clear that Israel is calling the shots.

In recent days, we have heard that the one aircraft carrier the U.S. had in the region, the USS Abraham Lincoln, is to be joined by a second called the USS Gerald Ford. U.S. media report that the Lincoln is in the “Arabian Sea,” which is a comical way of saying that it’s keeping its distance from Iran’s shores and Houthi missiles off the coast of Yemen. But other reports are suggesting that the reason why Trump claims he has sent a second carrier – to beef up the “flotilla” in case of a war breaking out with Iran – is untrue. Some insiders are briefing journalists that the Lincoln has technical problems which will render it useless in a combat situation and so needs to be replaced with the more advanced Ford.

However, even this might be a false narrative offered by Pentagon insiders who are not supporters of Trump. A second explanation about the carriers is that it buys Trump time. He has even told reporters that it will take about a month for the Ford to get there, which he believes should be ample time for a deal to be struck with Iran, or at least will give him four more weeks to work out a way of dealing with the threat – that’s the threat from Israel, not Iran.

Israel threatened Trump before when he went ahead with his bunker buster bombs in June of last year by saying simply, “If you don’t do it, we’ll nuke Iran.” It worked. This time around, the threat is, “If you don’t join us, then we’ll strike Iran alone and you will have to deal with the consequences of being the first U.S. president to have to explain to the Jewish lobby why Iran is wiping Israel off the face of the map.” This second threat is multi-layered and also might work with Trump, given that the midterm elections, which are approaching, will cost twice what the elections cost which got him into office. It will be Jewish money which bankrolls him this time around, with the intention of saving him from losing both houses and facing inevitable impeachment.

And so, in many ways, Trump is closer to and more dependent on the regime in Tehran to help him out. A deal which limits the enrichment of uranium and can guarantee no nuclear bomb can be made might be something he can present to the American people as a great victory. The irony is that the deal might be more or less a carbon copy of Obama’s, which he, Trump, rejected while in his first term in office, a rejection which has created the present crisis.

The trouble with any deal now about enrichment is that it is unlikely to satisfy the Israelis, who have become more aware in recent weeks about the capability of Iran’s latest generation of ballistic missiles both in terms of defence and attack. Moreover, the U.S. attack on Iran last year for 12 days has now raised the stakes to a fever pitch, making the Iranians clearer and more focused about any kind of attack happening against them: all-out war.

According to some credible reports, Trump was recently asking Pentagon chiefs if the U.S. could carry out a single in-and-out strike operation which could be used to warn Iran while satisfying Israel at the same time about the U.S. threat, and he was told no such options are feasible. This is due to Iran being much more prepared now for such attacks, both militarily and intelligence-wise, while the Mossad operation of creating civil strife on the ground failed spectacularly. The U.S. is in a very tight corner right now, as its forces and its allies in the region are in the crosshairs of Iran the moment the first bomb is dropped, and so Trump’s options to go to war are very limited. It would be suicidal for Trump to strike Iran, as the losses to U.S. forces and the disruption to oil distribution via the Straits of Hormuz would be too great, not to mention the destruction of infrastructure in Israel itself.

But there is also another factor which is putting all the pressure on Trump to get a deal with Iran. Since last June’s attack and more recently Trump’s betrayal of cordial relations with Putin conjured up at Alaska, along with the Venezuela coup, both Russia and China have upped their support for Iran. This is a critical factor now preventing Trump from hitting Iran with anything. China recently gave Iran its latest state-of-the-art new radar system which can identify U.S. stealth bombers at a range of 700km. Game changer. If you consider Iran, Israel, and the U.S. as three poker players at the table, it is clear that Iran now has the best hand with the most options. It can maximize its role now and exploit Trump’s vulnerability by going for a deal which involves sanctions being relieved, or it could hold out and play a long game way beyond Trump’s one-month breathing space and really turn up the heat on him leading up to the midterms in November. Iran always plays for time and is good at this strategy. And given that even the kindest analysis of America’s strike capability in Iran is two weeks before depletion of all missile stocks is reached, any hawks close to Trump who are pushing for a strike must have the destruction of the U.S. in their strategy as well, as Iran cannot be pounded into a state of submission in such a short space of time. Surely that can’t be the aim of Bibi. Surely not!

February 17, 2026 Posted by | Militarism, Wars for Israel | , , , , , | Comments Off on Trump stalls over Iran strike plan, Iran holds all the aces

Zelensky’s Ceasefire for Elections is Strategic Gambit, Not Democratic Move

By Ekaterina Blinova – Sputnik – 17.02.2026

Volodymyr Zelensky’s reluctance to hold elections in Ukraine is multi-faced, according to Marco Marsili, geopolitical analyst at CESRAN International and former OSCE election observer.

The Ukrainian politician is on thin ice despite optimistic polling numbers: “The reported approval ratings reflect a carefully managed wartime narrative, not democratic reality,” Marsili tells Sputnik.

What’s the reality?

  • Demographic catastrophe: An entire generation of fighting-age men has been consumed by the front lines
  • Economic collapse: Beyond Western-subsidized survival, Ukraine’s economy is a shell
  • Neo-Nazi grip: Zelensky’s political survival depends on being perceived as a strong promoter of nationalism

To block elections and derail legitimate peace talks, Zelensky is demanding conditions that directly contradict Russia’s position.

“Zelensky’s proposal for a two-month ceasefire to enable elections is a multilayered strategic gambit, not a genuine democratic exercise,” says Marsili.
How would Zelensky use the ceasefire he demands?

Military respite: “It is a classic military pause dressed in political clothing,” the pundit explains. “Two months without active hostilities would allow Ukraine to reconstitute its shattered forces.”

Shifting blame: By proposing elections and blaming Russia for rejection, Zelensky positions himself as pro-democracy and paints Moscow as the obstacle.

Dragging West deeper into conflict: A positive Western response to Zelensky’s security demands during potential elections deepens their commitment; a negative one exposes the limits of their support.

“Russia’s insistence on addressing the root causes — NATO expansion, the status of Russian-speaking populations, Ukraine’s neutrality — reflects its view that procedural fixes like elections are meaningless without resolving the underlying security architecture,” Marsili underscores.

February 17, 2026 Posted by | Deception, Militarism | , , | Comments Off on Zelensky’s Ceasefire for Elections is Strategic Gambit, Not Democratic Move

US and Dutch pilots flying F-16s for Ukraine – Western media

RT | February 17, 2026

The Ukrainian military is secretly using a squadron of veteran NATO pilots to fly donated US-made F-16 fighter jets, the French outlet Intelligence Online reported on Monday.

Moscow has long warned that Western nations are moving closer to direct conflict with Russia. The report, which Kiev has denied, said the covert mission relies primarily on experienced US and Dutch air force veterans.

The foreign personnel are deployed far from the front lines and focus on intercepting Russian long-range weapons, the outlet said. They are no longer part of their original militaries and reportedly work for Kiev as civilian contractors, without military ranks and outside the Ukrainian chain of command.

A shortage of trained Ukrainian pilots was previously identified as the main obstacle to using F-16s donated to Kiev. Training courses were reportedly undermined by language barriers, a lack of qualified trainees, and other issues, and were simplified for speed.

Shortly after the first F-16s arrived in Ukraine in August 2024, Kiev began losing pilots in botched air defense missions, with four such incidents acknowledged.

The secret foreign squadron provides pilots with the experience needed to operate advanced F-16 equipment, Intelligence Online said.

Moscow views the Ukraine conflict as a NATO proxy war against Russia, in which key elements of Kiev’s military effort – including intelligence, planning, troop training, and maintenance of complex Western hardware – are handled by foreign personnel.

Western specialists were reportedly involved in Ukrainian strikes using Storm Shadow/SCALP air-launched cruise missiles on Russian territory. German officials opposed supplying Taurus missiles because Ukrainians cannot launch them independently.

Russia also says Western nations tacitly support Kiev’s recruitment of mercenaries from among their military veterans. Ambassador-at-Large Rodion Miroshnik estimated that around 20,000 foreign fighters have taken part in the conflict on the Ukrainian side.

February 17, 2026 Posted by | Deception, Militarism | , | Comments Off on US and Dutch pilots flying F-16s for Ukraine – Western media

West’s Claims of Non-Involvement in Ukraine Conflict ‘Epitome of Hypocrisy’ – Expert

Sputnik – 17.02.2026

NATO personnel operating Western military hardware in the Ukrainian conflict zone has long been an open secret, Russian military analyst Viktor Litovkin tells Sputnik.

Ukraine, Litovkin explains, ended up relying on foreign personnel because it:

  • Lacks the necessary number of skilled pilots and specialists to operate sophisticated weapon systems like F-16 jets or HIMARS rockets
  • Has a severe shortage of engineers who know English well enough to interpret tech manuals and maintenance charts for NATO military gear

How Does This Personnel Pipeline Work?

Western military specialists operating in Ukraine are not officially regarded as members of their respective home countries’ armed forces, masquerading instead as volunteers who chose on their own to “defend democracy.”

“It’s a tried and tested scenario: a career military man goes on a fake leave and heads off to a warzone, to be reinstated upon his return home,” says Litovkin.

Western powers’ claims of alleged non-involvement in the Ukrainian conflict are the epitome of hypocrisy, he notes.

Second-hand War Gear

NATO countries deliberately provide Ukraine with second-rate, older war gear due to concerns that any advanced military hardware supplied to the Ukrainian forces would be inevitably captured by Russian forces, Litovkin points out.

As a result, Western personnel end up operating outdated military hardware while facing much more advanced Russian combat aircraft and weapon systems that make short work of them.

February 17, 2026 Posted by | Deception, Militarism | , , | Comments Off on West’s Claims of Non-Involvement in Ukraine Conflict ‘Epitome of Hypocrisy’ – Expert

Putin aide urges retaliation to ‘Western piracy’

RT | February 17, 2026

Russia’s response to “Western piracy” targeting its maritime trade should be forceful and not limited to diplomatic means, an aide to President Vladimir Putin has said.

Nikolay Patrushev, a veteran national security official who heads a naval policymaking body, called for stronger action against Western moves targeting vessels described as part of an alleged Russian ‘shadow fleet’.

Attempts to paralyze Russian foreign trade will only intensify, Patrushev warned in an interview with Argumenty i Fakty published on Tuesday.

“Unless we push back forcefully, soon the English, the French, and even the Balts will get brazen enough to try and block our nation’s access to at least the Atlantic,” he said.

“The Europeans are in essence making steps to impose a naval blockade, deliberately pushing towards a military escalation, testing the limits of our patience and provoking our retaliation. If the situation is not resolved peacefully, the Navy will be breaking and lifting the blockade,” Patrushev said.

“Let’s not forget that plenty of vessels sail the seas under European flags. We may get curious about what they are shipping and where,” he added.

Patrushev expressed skepticism that tensions could ease, saying “there is little hope that the West has an ounce of respect for diplomacy and the law.” He argued that “the old practice of ‘gunboat diplomacy’ is being revived,” citing US operations targeting Venezuela and Iran.

Washington has used warships to target suspected drug smuggling boats off Venezuela and intercept outgoing oil tankers, including one sailing under a Russian flag. The Pentagon is now concentrating assets in the Middle East as President Donald Trump pressures Iran to accept restrictions on its missile deterrence against Israel.

In today’s world, the Russian Navy is “a geopolitical tool that combines might with flexibility and is suitable for both peacetime and armed conflicts,” Patrushev said. Its strength is needed to protect Russia’s “ability to export oil, grain and fertilizers, and the normal functioning of the state.”

February 17, 2026 Posted by | Economics, Militarism, War Crimes | , , , | Comments Off on Putin aide urges retaliation to ‘Western piracy’

The Depth Charge in the Womb

An Essay on the Dalkon Shield

Lies are Unbekoming | February 17, 2026

Four days before A. H. Robins signed the contract to purchase the Dalkon Shield intrauterine device, the company’s own director of pharmaceutical research reported that no one knew how long the device’s tail string would remain chemically stable inside a woman’s body. “The device has not been subjected to any formal stability testing,” Oscar Klioze wrote in his memo on June 8, 1970. He also noted that the plastic used in the Shield had been cleared by the FDA for packaging meat — not for implantation in humans.

Seventeen days after the purchase, on June 29, a company orientation report circulated to thirty-nine executives — including the chairman, the president, and multiple vice-presidents — carried a more specific warning: the tail string had a “wicking” tendency, meaning it could draw bacteria from the vagina into the sterile uterus. The report recommended “a careful review.”

A. H. Robins began selling the Dalkon Shield nationally six months later. It never conducted wicking studies on the string. Over the next four years, the company distributed 4.5 million Shields in eighty countries. By the company’s own conservative estimate, roughly 88,000 women in the United States alone were injured. At least eighteen died. Hundreds of thousands suffered pelvic infections, septic abortions, perforated uteri, and permanent sterility.

The Dalkon Shield is sometimes treated as a historical curiosity — a cautionary tale from an era of looser regulation. That framing obscures what actually happened. The record, built from internal company memos, sworn depositions, congressional testimony, and court documents, reveals something more instructive: a template. A sequence of decisions, repeated across every phase of the product’s life, that follows a pattern so consistent it functions as a blueprint.

That pattern is worth studying in detail. Not because the Dalkon Shield is unique, but because it is not.

The Founding Fraud

The Dalkon Shield’s commercial life rested on a single published study. In February 1970, Dr. Hugh J. Davis of Johns Hopkins University reported in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology that, of 640 women fitted with the Shield over twelve months, only five became pregnant — a rate of 1.1 percent. This made the Shield competitive with oral contraceptives and dramatically superior to every other IUD on the market.

The study had foundational problems that A. H. Robins knew about before it bought the device.

The average duration of use per patient was 5.54 months — barely half the twelve-month study period. Biostatistical researchers at Johns Hopkins estimated that a minimum of 1,200 patients would have been needed to establish a pregnancy rate of one or two percent with confidence. Davis used 640. He sent his data to the university’s statisticians within three days of the study’s closing date — far too quickly to capture pregnancies that had occurred but not yet been detected. When participants dropped out of the study, they vanished from the data, and these were the women most likely to have become pregnant or experienced complications. Davis testified vaguely that “less than 5 percent” were lost to follow-up. If one or two of them had conceived, the 1.1 percent rate would have dissolved.

Davis had a financial stake in the outcome. He held 35 percent of the Dalkon Corporation, the entity that sold the Shield to A. H. Robins for $750,000 plus a 10 percent royalty. He was also retained as a paid consultant. None of this was disclosed in his published study. When asked at a Senate hearing whether he had “recently patented such a device,” Davis gave testimony that was technically accurate and deliberately misleading: “I hold no recent patent on any intrauterine device.” He held something more valuable — equity.

A. H. Robins knew the published figures were wrong before finalizing the purchase. When Dr. Fred Clark visited Davis in Baltimore on June 8, 1970, to review the data, he found that over fourteen months, 832 insertions had produced 26 pregnancies — a rate of 3.1 percent, nearly three times what Davis had published. Clark recorded these numbers in a confidential memo that circulated to senior officials. A. H. Robins later claimed the discrepancy resulted from Clark’s secretary misreading his handwriting.

That explanation sits uneasily beside a second memo, written three days later by senior vice-president Jack Freund, which stated that Davis’s one-year follow-up period was not long enough “to project [pregnancy figures] with confidence to the population as a whole.” The company’s own biostatistician, Lester Preston, was never asked to review the fourteen-month data.

A. H. Robins purchased 199,000 reprints of the Davis article and distributed them to physicians. By August 1973, the company had printed more than five million pieces of Shield promotional literature. The 1.1 percent pregnancy rate remained the centerpiece. An internal memo from Shield project coordinator Allen Polon, dated October 31, 1973, finally stated what the company had long known: “A pregnancy rate of 1.1 percent is stated which is not valid.” Polon recommended destroying the literature. By then, A. H. Robins had captured 56 to 59 percent of the American IUD market.

The promotion machine extended beyond reprints. In September 1972, Robins published “A Progress Report,” reportedly the largest and costliest advertisement in the history of the IUD business — an eight-page, multicolor spread proclaiming “The IUD That’s Changing Current Thinking About Contraceptives.” It cited four published studies to substantiate low pregnancy rates. The highest rate cited was four times the lowest, a statistical oddity the ad did not address. Two of the four studies were authored by men with undisclosed financial ties to the company: Davis, and Dr. Thad Earl, a Defiance, Ohio physician who held 7.5 percent of the Dalkon Corporation stock and received royalties on every Shield sold. Earl reported a 0.5 percent pregnancy rate — a figure that matched a prediction Davis had made at an international conference months before Earl’s study was completed. A. H. Robins helped Earl draft his article and performed the statistical calculations. Neither Earl’s financial stake nor his consultancy was disclosed in the publication.

A company telegram to its northern sales division captured the ethos: “Northern Division will not be humiliated by a lack of Dalkon sales. If you have not sold at least 25 packages of 8 then you are instructed to call me. Be prepared to give me your callback figures. No excuses or hedging will be tolerated, or look for another occupation.”

Independent studies told a different story. The Kaiser-Permanente Medical Center in Sacramento reported a 5.6 percent pregnancy rate and a 28.7 percent removal rate. Beth Israel Hospital in Boston reported 10.1 percent. Dr. William Floyd of Wayne State University reviewed the Davis study’s internal evidence, concluded it was biased, and suggested the true rate was around 5 percent. A. H. Robins ignored him. In July 1973, the FDA wrote directly to Chairman E. Claiborne Robins asking him to reconcile the very low pregnancy rates in the company’s advertisements with the much higher rates reported by independent researchers. Robins testified that he had received the letter but could not recall it.


The String

The tail string is where the story becomes a matter of life and death.

Every IUD has a string that runs from the device inside the uterus, through the cervix, into the vagina. It allows the woman to check the device’s position and the doctor to remove it. The string passes through the cervical canal, where mucus acts as the body’s barrier against bacterial invasion. On every other IUD of that era, the string was an impervious monofilament — bacteria could not get into it.

The Dalkon Shield string was different. To the naked eye, it appeared to be a monofilament. Under magnification, it was a cylindrical sheath encasing 200 to 450 separate round filaments, separated by spaces. Neither end was sealed. Any bacteria that entered the spaces between the filaments would be insulated from the body’s immune defenses while being drawn upward into the uterus by capillary action — the same phenomenon that draws melting wax up a candle wick.

Irwin Lerner, the Shield’s listed inventor, warned A. H. Robins about the wicking tendency on or before June 29, 1970. This warning reached thirty-nine executives. No one acted on it.

Wayne Crowder discovered the danger independently. Crowder was a quality control supervisor at Chap Stick Company, a Robins subsidiary in Lynchburg, Virginia, assigned to oversee Shield production when assembly moved there in 1971. In March of that year — less than two weeks after he first learned of the Shield’s existence — Crowder noticed tiny holes in the string’s sheath below the attachment knot, caused by the tying process. He rejected an entire shipment of 10,000 to 12,000 Shields. His superiors at Chap Stick asked A. H. Robins for permission to override the rejection. Permission was granted. The Shields were shipped.

Crowder conducted his own wicking experiment. He stood clipped sections of the string in beakers of water. Hours later, he could squeeze water from the dry ends. The strings wicked through the knots. He demonstrated the results to his supervisor, Julian Ross. Ross told him the string was not his responsibility and to leave it alone.

Crowder then demonstrated a solution. He applied the flame of a cigarette lighter to the open end of a string and watched it shrivel into a small, solid bead. Heat-sealing. Simple, effective, and cheap. He showed this to Ross, then to Chap Stick president Daniel French. French acknowledged the logic, called Crowder’s concern about infection “reasonable,” and predicted that “Robins wouldn’t go for” the fix. “He said that they had too much time and money invested in the present configuration,” Crowder testified. French estimated the cost of heat-sealing at five to ten cents per Shield. A. H. Robins sold each Shield for up to $4.35.

Crowder tried to escalate. French passed the concern to A. H. Robins. Dr. Fred Clark called French and sharply rebuffed him for worrying about testing. Chap Stick should focus on getting the device assembled and packaged. French backed down. “It is not the intention of the Chap Stick Company to attempt any unauthorized improvements in the Dalkon Shield,” French wrote. “My only interest in the Dalkon Shield is to produce it at the lowest possible price and, therefore, increase Robins’ gross profit level.”

Ross told Crowder he hoped he had finally gotten the string business out of his system. “I told him that I couldn’t in good conscience not say something about something that I felt could cause infections,” Crowder later testified. “And he said that my conscience didn’t pay my salary.”

A. H. Robins did not attempt to duplicate Crowder’s wicking studies until 1974, after the Shield was already off the market. The heat-sealing idea was revived around the same time — and then dismissed. “It is too late to ‘heat seal’ now,” wrote Ellen Preston in a December 1974 memo. “We need to abandon the ‘multifilament’ string. Heat-sealing would have been a good thing to have done 4 years ago.”

Meanwhile, Kenneth Moore, the Shield project coordinator, spent three years “desperately searching,” as he later put it, for a new tail string. Company officials swore under oath that the search was unrelated to any concern about bacteria or infection. “There was no safety reason behind my search,” testified microbiological research director Robert Tankersley. The company found a superior alternative — Gore-Tex, which would not wick, was soft, strong, and nearly indestructible. The estimated cost was 6.1 cents per string, compared with 0.63 cents for the existing Supramid string. For one million Shields, the difference was approximately $54,000. Robins’s average net earnings at the time were nearly $70,000 per day.

The company chose not to switch.

In January 1975, Tankersley outlined four experiments to determine whether the string wicked bacteria. He estimated they would take two and a half weeks, use four rabbits, and cost $90. The experiments were not funded.

Wayne Crowder was forced out of Chap Stick during a company reorganization in 1978. He had worked there for fifteen years and was earning $13,500 a year. He filed a wrongful termination suit, but a judge ruled he had missed the one-year statute of limitations. As of 1985, he had been unable to find regular employment. “No exceptional genius was required to understand the hazards of that design,” he said.


The Bodies

On March 30, 1973, a thirty-one-year-old Arizona mother of two died after her uterus spontaneously aborted the baby she had been carrying for more than four months. The infection had spread rapidly, essentially poisoning her. Antibiotics could not save her. She had become pregnant while wearing a Dalkon Shield.

Spontaneous septic abortions in the middle trimester of pregnancy were extremely rare in 1973. Until then, the only septic abortions doctors encountered were in women who had undergone illegal or self-induced procedures. This woman had not tried to abort. Her Shield was still in place when the infection took hold.

A. H. Robins learned of the death two months later through the medical grapevine. Dr. Donald Christian, head of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Arizona Medical Center, was struck by the case. He later learned of two additional deaths — including a twenty-four-year-old mother of two who developed flu-like symptoms during her fourth month of pregnancy. Three days later, she was dead.

Christian contacted A. H. Robins, the FDA, and the Centers for Disease Control. He says the agencies ignored him. The company’s response, through Ellen Preston, was to treat the reports as isolated incidents. “I would estimate that I have been advised of a dozen, at the very most, cases of septic abortion associated with the Dalkon Shield,” Preston wrote. The company’s own complaint file, withheld from FDA inspectors until congressional pressure forced its release, indicated an 8.8 percent pregnancy rate — eight times the advertised figure.

By June 1974, Christian’s paper linking the Shield to fatal sepsis appeared in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology — the same journal that had published Davis’s original study four years earlier. “The greatest concern is the rather insidious yet rapid manner in which these patients become ill,” Christian wrote. In three of the five deaths he documented, the first symptoms — disarmingly innocuous in themselves — occurred within thirty-one to seventy-two hours of death.

The toll mounted. By August 1974, the FDA had reports of eleven deaths and 209 serious illnesses from septic abortions in Shield wearers. The Centers for Disease Control surveyed 34,544 physicians and found that fatal septic abortions occurred twice as frequently among Shield users as among women wearing other IUDs. The Planned Parenthood Federation instructed its 183 clinics to stop prescribing the Shield.

A. H. Robins did not recall the device. It suspended marketing on June 28, 1974, after FDA Commissioner Alexander Schmidt requested a halt until the Shield’s “questionable safety” could be reviewed. But company chairman E. Claiborne Robins, Sr., privately celebrated that the FDA had not demanded a full recall. “We had all felt that the decision would be political,” he wrote in an internal memo. The FDA’s press release announcing the suspension — which company officials had helped draft — “helped reinforce our image as an ethical pharmaceutical company.”

The company continued to insist the Shield was safe and effective. It formally abandoned plans to remarket the device in August 1975, but took no action to remove the estimated 600,000 Shields still inside American women. That recommendation did not come until September 1980, when a “Dear Doctor” letter suggested removal. The October 1984 recall — the company’s first direct communication to women themselves — came more than a decade after the deaths began.

In the meantime, Dr. Howard Tatum, inventor of the rival Copper-T IUD, had independently confirmed what Crowder and Lerner had warned about years earlier. Tatum suspended Shield tail strings in dye solution. Within twenty-four hours, dye rose through the entire length, past both knots. He repeated the experiment with live E. coli bacteria. After forty-eight hours, bacteria had risen to the base of the final knot — which would sit inside the uterus. He found no wicking in any other IUD. Tatum then examined used Shield strings returned from clinics across the country and successfully cultured bacteria from their interiors. He found breaks in the nylon sheath, especially just below the attachment knot — exactly where Crowder had found them.

The string’s nylon 6 sheath deteriorated inside the body, as the medical literature since 1956 had warned nylon would do in body cavities. Professor Paula Fives-Taylor of the University of Vermont found that the number of bacteria adhering to strings increased 40 percent after twenty-five to thirty-six months of use — and tripled after thirty-seven to forty-eight months. A woman wearing a Shield for thirty-six months was 9.2 times more likely to suffer pelvic inflammatory disease than a woman using no contraception. For other IUDs, the risk was 1.2 times greater.

The Dalkon Corporation had recommended replacement of the Shield after two years — a recommendation that could have averted infections in countless women. A. H. Robins dropped this guidance because its leading competitor’s labeling made no such recommendation.


The Regulatory Void

The Dalkon Shield entered the market through a gap in federal law that seems almost designed for exploitation. In 1970, the FDA regulated drugs but not medical devices. An IUD was classified as a device. This meant that A. H. Robins was not required to demonstrate safety, conduct clinical trials, submit data to the FDA, or secure approval before selling the Shield to millions of women.

Hugh Davis had exploited this gap from the start. On January 14, 1970 — eight days before his study appeared in print — he testified as the lead witness before Senator Gaylord Nelson’s subcommittee hearing on birth-control drugs. Before television cameras and a press corps covering a guaranteed story, Davis built the market for his own undisclosed product by stoking fears about the Pill. “Shall we have millions of Americans on the pill for twenty years and then discover it was all a great mistake?” he asked. Within minutes, he pushed the Shield’s purported efficacy ever closer to perfection: “some modern intrauterine devices provide a 99 percent protection against pregnancy… The intrauterine devices that are available now can give you a 99 percent or better protection.” Viewers assumed they were watching a scientist from a distinguished academic institution motivated by concern for women’s health. They were watching a 35-percent shareholder.

A. H. Robins understood the value of the device classification and worked to protect it. The Shield contained copper sulfate, which the company initially believed might have a contraceptive effect — which would have made the device a drug, triggering FDA oversight and testing requirements. Internal discussions established that the copper served no purpose. “Does copper in Shield accomplish anything? No!” was the consensus at a February 1972 meeting of five Robins doctors and scientists. But the company continued marketing the copper-containing Shield rather than reformulating it, because the copper’s ineffectiveness was precisely what kept the device out of the FDA’s drug-regulation framework. When the FDA asked, Robins supplied data supporting the conclusion that the copper was pharmacologically insignificant. The FDA agreed: the Shield was a device.

The Medical Device Amendments — which would have required demonstration of safety and efficacy before marketing — did not become law until May 1976, six years after the Shield entered the market and two years after it was pulled.

The regulatory void extended beyond classification. The FDA had no authority to require adverse event reporting for devices, no power to compel recalls, and no systematic mechanism for collecting safety data. When reports of deaths and infections accumulated, the FDA could request information, hold hearings, and ask the company to stop selling. It could not order any of these things. Every consequential action depended on A. H. Robins’s voluntary cooperation.

At the 1973 congressional hearings, Dr. Russel Thomsen — an army obstetrician-gynecologist who had been publicly criticizing the Shield — dissected the company’s advertising claims with systematic precision. He demonstrated how the “life table” statistical method, originally developed as a legitimate research tool, had been co-opted for advertising. He showed that the four studies cited in the “Progress Report” covered averages of only 5 to 6 months of use, projected outward to create the appearance of twelve-month data. He walked the committee through Davis’s textbook, which featured a chart comparing ten IUDs in which the Dalkon Shield — modestly listed last — was superior in every category. The chart compared the Shield’s short, inadequate study against much larger and longer studies of its competitors. “The deception is amazing,” Thomsen said. Representative Clarence Brown asked if Davis was “party to fraud.” Thomsen paused. “Yes, I do after going from the beginning to the end of this.”

Thomsen characterized the “Progress Report” as “a calculated effort to mislead the doctors.” The FDA’s director of medical devices dismissed the ad’s problems as “mild puffery.”


The Suppression

The company’s behavior during litigation added a dimension that the founding fraud and the regulatory gap cannot fully explain.

A. H. Robins hired the law firm McGuire, Woods, and Battle to handle Shield lawsuits in mid-1975. The firm commissioned its own studies on the tail string. These became known as the “secret studies” because their results were never made public. Whenever a judge ordered their production, the company offered settlements that plaintiff attorneys found impossible to refuse.

The concealment extended to regulatory proceedings. In April 1975, Dr. Fred Clark appeared before the FDA’s Ad Hoc Committee and was asked whether private studies had been conducted on the Shield. The answer was no. In fact, eight months after national marketing began, Robins had initiated a two-year safety study in baboons. It produced a 30 percent perforation and migration rate and killed one animal in eight from perforation or infection. This information was available when Clark testified. It was not brought to the committee’s attention.

Roger Tuttle, a Robins attorney from 1971 to 1976 who later taught law at Oral Roberts University, revealed during a 1984 deposition that Dalkon Shield documents had been destroyed. The destruction had taken place in early February 1975, while a jury was deliberating in one of the first Shield trials. Tuttle said he had been prompted to come forward by Judge Miles Lord’s speech to Robins executives the previous month.

Judge Lord, a U.S. District Judge in Minneapolis assigned twenty-three Shield cases in December 1983, had personally traveled to Richmond to supervise document production after months of obstruction. He found depositions conducted in cramped, overheated rooms at the company’s own headquarters, with defense attorneys sitting shoulder-to-shoulder with their clients — positioned so that “a nudge by an attorney could, and did, silence the deponent.” The company rotated its legal team so frequently that “the court must start up from ground level over and over.” When Lord examined the discovery record, he concluded that documents relevant to the Shield had been withheld during years of prior litigation.

On February 29, 1984, Lord delivered a statement to three senior Robins officers summoned to his courtroom. He had originally intended to have them read it silently, but after their attorneys instructed them not to respond to his questions, he read it aloud:

“When the time came for these women to make their claims against your company, you attacked their characters. You inquired into their sexual practices and into the identity of their sex partners. You exposed these women — and ruined families and reputations and careers — in order to intimidate those who would raise their voices against you.”

A. H. Robins filed two complaints against Lord for judicial misconduct. The company retained former U.S. Attorney General Griffin Bell to lead the counterattack. Lord was cleared of misconduct, but his speech was expunged from the record. His legal bills totaled $110,000.

The company’s courtroom strategy against plaintiffs was systematic. In the case of Linda Harre of Tampa, Florida, who had suffered pelvic inflammatory disease and was left unable to bear children, Robins’s sole expert witness on wicking was Dr. Louis Keith, a paid consultant who had received $277,092 from the company by April 1985. Keith testified that his own laboratory experiments showed the string did not wick bacteria, and the jury believed him. An FBI investigation of possible perjury followed. Harre lost her case.

Even A. H. Robins’s own general counsel, William Forrest, was not spared the Shield’s consequences. In a 1984 deposition, Forrest disclosed that his wife had undergone a hysterectomy shortly after her own Shield was removed in 1975. Asked whether her doctor had indicated any connection to the device, Forrest replied: “Not that I know of.” Had he asked her? “I don’t recall.” He was promoted to vice-president.


Overseas

While the company fought to contain the crisis domestically, the Shield’s reach extended far beyond American borders.

The Agency for International Development began shipping Shields to developing countries in April 1971, initially at the request of the International Planned Parenthood Federation. By mid-1974, AID had distributed nearly 700,000 Shields to approximately seventy countries. The relationship between Robins and AID was close; as AID’s own later report noted, “Especially close was the working relationship developed by Robert W. Nickless, Director of International Marketing for A. H. Robins, with A.I.D.”

After Robins suspended domestic marketing in June 1974, AID issued warnings to its field offices — but did not recommend that Shields already inside women be removed. This was, as AID later explained, “in line with FDA and manufacturer pronouncements on the subject.” The recommendation for removal did not come until September 1980, six years after the suspension of sales. By then, the damage had long been compounding inside women across the developing world.

AID later accounted for 47 percent of the Shields it had distributed — 328,997 devices returned or destroyed. The remaining 53 percent — 368,295 Shields — were unaccounted for. AID’s report concluded that “few Dalkon Shields are likely still in use.”

Attorney Martina Langley, who spent years working with the poor in Central American clinics, called this conclusion “a hypocritical joke.” She had seen Shields being inserted in women as late as 1980 in El Salvador. Record-keeping in the country’s medical clinics was, in her words, “atrocious, if it exists at all.” There was no way to know how many Shields had been inserted or removed. Neither A. H. Robins nor AID conducted publicity campaigns to inform women in developing countries about the danger. Robins operated a plant in San Salvador. “If they would give five cents apiece for Shields, they would have gotten every one of them,” Langley said.

Inexpensive radio campaigns would probably have been adequate to reach most of these women. Langley’s requests to A. H. Robins to fund such campaigns went unanswered. In Australia, an estimated 100,000 Shields were sold, with no way to verify how many had been inserted. Across seventy-nine countries, the recall effort depended on cables to field offices and letters to ambassadors — not on any direct communication with the women who were actually wearing the device.


The Reckoning That Wasn’t

A. H. Robins filed for bankruptcy in August 1985. Through June of that year, 14,330 lawsuits had been filed, with new claims arriving at fifteen per day. The company and its insurer had paid out $378.3 million to dispose of cases, plus $107.3 million in legal expenses. Juries awarded $24.8 million in punitive damages. The company established a $615 million reserve fund, generating $126 million in tax benefits — meaning American taxpayers subsidized a portion of the cost of compensating the company’s victims.

No A. H. Robins executive faced criminal prosecution. Most of the officials who played key roles in the Shield’s history were promoted. E. Claiborne Robins, Sr., remained chairman of the board. The company continued to insist that the Shield was safe and effective, “no worse and perhaps better in design than other IUDs still on the market.” The Shield had simply been the victim of a biased press and greedy plaintiffs’ attorneys, according to former president William Zimmer and other officials.

Some victims who stood to win substantial damages chose not to sue — either because they wanted to put a horrifying experience behind them, or because they valued avoiding public disclosure of a matter as private as the destruction of their ability to bear children. Others were deterred by the company’s courtroom strategy, which included invasive interrogation of women’s sexual histories and the exposure of their private lives — calculated, as Judge Lord charged, “in order to intimidate those who would raise their voices against you.” Still others did not know or had forgotten the make of their IUD. By January 1985, nearly 4,000 calls had come in on the company’s phone lines from women wearing an IUD “of unknown type.”

The family remained prominent philanthropists in Richmond, Virginia, where, as one newspaper reported, “there is scant talk about the cloud that hangs over Robins.”

The company’s position, maintained through fourteen years of litigation, never shifted: “Robins believes that serious scientific questions exist about whether the Dalkon Shield poses a significantly different risk of infection than other IUDs.”


The Template

The Dalkon Shield story follows a sequence that has repeated across industries and decades. Each element of the sequence is documented here not by inference or speculation, but by the company’s own internal memos, sworn testimony of its own officers, and the rulings of federal judges who reviewed the evidence.

The sequence:

A founding study with fatal methodological flaws, authored by a researcher with an undisclosed financial stake, published in a prestigious journal and distributed to hundreds of thousands of physicians as though it were independent science.

A known defect — identified before national marketing began, confirmed by a quality control supervisor within weeks of encountering the product, fixable for pennies — suppressed because addressing it would slow production, increase costs, and implicitly acknowledge a problem.

A regulatory void, understood and actively maintained by the company, that allowed a device implanted in millions of women to reach the market without a single required safety test.

Warnings from inside and outside the company — from its own quality control supervisor, from independent physicians, from a congressional witness — met not with investigation but with dismissal, retaliation, and bureaucratic absorption.

A body count that accumulated for years while the company treated each death as an isolated incident, challenged the methodology of every unfavorable study, and funded its own research to generate favorable data.

A delayed recall, driven not by concern for women’s safety but by the calculus of litigation — delayed explicitly because, as the company’s own attorney argued, a recall would be “a confession of liability.”

Legal warfare against victims, including invasive interrogation of their sexual histories, calculated to deter future plaintiffs from coming forward.

Document destruction during active litigation. Secret studies whose results were suppressed by settling cases before judges could compel their disclosure.

And throughout, the promotion and retention of every executive involved, the absence of criminal accountability, and the company’s unwavering public insistence that nothing was wrong.

Wayne Crowder sealed the end of a string with a cigarette lighter in March 1971 and showed his bosses how to prevent infections. The fix would have cost pennies. He was told his conscience didn’t pay his salary, and eventually he was pushed out. Fourteen years later, he couldn’t find work.

The women — in Baltimore, in Tucson, in Defiance, Ohio, in El Salvador — were never asked whether they’d like to participate in this experiment. The document exists. The signatures are on it. The dates precede the marketing. Whatever word you choose for the distance between what was known and what was done, the record is not ambiguous about what it contains.


References

  1. Morton Mintz, At Any Cost: Corporate Greed, Women, and the Dalkon Shield (New York: Pantheon Books, 1985).
  2. Susan Perry and Jim Dawson, Nightmare: Women and the Dalkon Shield (New York: Macmillan, 1985).

Key documentary sources cited in these books and referenced in this essay include:

  • Oscar Klioze memo to Jack Freund on Shield stability testing, June 8, 1970
  • R. W. Nickless, “Orientation Report” on the Dalkon Shield (circulated to 39 executives), June 29, 1970
  • Fred Clark confidential memo on visit to Hugh Davis, June 8, 1970
  • Jack Freund memo on inadequacy of Davis follow-up period, June 11, 1970
  • Hugh J. Davis, “The Shield Intrauterine Device: A Superior Modern Contraceptive Device,” American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 106, no. 3 (February 1, 1970)
  • Thad J. Earl, “The Shield Intrauterine Device,” American Family Physician (September 1971)
  • Allen J. Polon memo re: “Destruction of Dalkon Shield Literature,” October 31, 1973
  • Ellen Preston memo on telephone conversation with Dr. Donald Christian, November 21, 1973
  • C. Donald Christian, “Maternal Deaths Associated with an Intrauterine Device,” American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 119, no. 4 (June 15, 1974)
  • E. Claiborne Robins, Sr., internal memo on FDA actions, July 2, 1974
  • Ellen Preston memo on heat-sealing, December 1974
  • Roger Tuttle deposition testimony, July 30, 1984 (U.S. District Court, Minneapolis)
  • Judge Miles W. Lord, remarks to A. H. Robins officers, February 29, 1984 (U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota)
  • Wayne Crowder deposition testimony, March 27, 1981
  • Russel J. Thomsen, testimony before House Intergovernmental Relations Subcommittee, May 31, 1973
  • Russel J. Thomsen, report on AID actions regarding the Dalkon Shield overseas, March 1985
  • Centers for Disease Control, re-analysis of Women’s Health Study data, American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (July 1983)
  • Senate Subcommittee on Monopoly hearing on birth-control drugs (testimony of Hugh J. Davis), January 14, 1970

February 17, 2026 Posted by | Corruption, Deception, Timeless or most popular | | Comments Off on The Depth Charge in the Womb

‘Fox guarding the henhouse’: AMA, Vaccine Integrity Project to conduct their own vaccine safety and efficacy reviews

By Suzanne Burdick, Ph.D. | The Defender | February 11, 2026

The American Medical Association (AMA) is teaming up with the Vaccine Integrity Project to conduct its own review of vaccine safety and efficacy, claiming that advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are no longer doing a good enough job.

The groups said Wednesday in a press release that “for decades,” the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) had “served as the engine of evidence-based vaccine policy” for the U.S. “That system has now effectively collapsed.”

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Press Secretary Emily G. Hilliard told The Defender the claim that ACIP’s evidence-based process has collapsed is “categorically false.” She said:

“ACIP continues to remain the nation’s advisory body for vaccine use recommendations driven by gold standard science. While outside organizations continue to conduct their own analyses and confuse the American people, those efforts do not replace or supersede the federal process that continues to guide vaccine policy in the United States.”

The Vaccine Integrity Project, based at the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP), says it is dedicated to “safeguarding vaccine use in the U.S.”

The AMA will work with the project to review vaccines for the 2026-2027 respiratory virus season. These include immunizations against COVID-19, influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), according to the press release.

CIDRAP Director Michael Osterholm said in a statement that the goal is “to restore peace of mind for clinicians and patients by ensuring that experts are continuously evaluating vaccine safety and effectiveness using transparent, evidence-based methods.”

Children’s Health Defense (CHD) General Counsel Kim Mack Rosenberg said it’s unlikely that the groups will restore people’s peace of mind about vaccines. She said:

“Unfortunately, the AMA and the Vaccine Integrity Project support a narrative about vaccines that is being exposed more and more as problematic and contradicted by what people are seeing with their own eyes.

“The system is broken and efforts to prop it up from the inside are being exposed for conflicts of interest and flawed analyses.”

The groups’ review process looks similar to how the ACIP traditionally worked, but they won’t issue recommendations. Instead, they will share their review results with medical societies, which can write recommendations for their patient demographic.

The AMA and the Vaccine Integrity Project said they will also involve medical societies and public health and healthcare organizations to craft policy questions.

Review members will disclose “relevant” conflicts of interest, according to the press release. However, “relevant” was left undefined.

The AMA and Vaccine Integrity Project said in a statement:

“The goal of this work is to ensure a deliberative, evidence-driven approach to produce the data necessary to understand the risks and benefits of vaccine policy decisions for all populations — the approach traditionally used by the federal government.”

The effort may generate more confusion among Americans who are torn between looking to the federal government or medical societies for vaccine guidance, according to Trial Site News.

“The country is no longer operating with a single, uncontested center of vaccine-policy gravity,” Trial Site News wrote.

‘Like asking the fox to guard the henhouse’

The Vaccine Integrity Project, launched in April 2025, is funded by an unrestricted gift from iAlumbra, a nonprofit founded by Walmart heiress and philanthropist Christy Walton.

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, The Greenwall Foundation and Lasker Foundation are also listed among the project’s funders.

The Vaccine Integrity Project declined The Defender’s request for a list of donation amounts and names of any individual donors.

Former CDC Director Rochelle Walensky serves as the Vaccine Integrity Project’s adviser of medical affairs. In 2022, Walensky admitted the CDC gave false information about COVID-19 vaccine safety monitoring.

Already, the Vaccine Integrity Project released a review of the hepatitis B vaccine that supported vaccinating all newborns at birth, rather than delaying when the mother has tested negative for hepatitis B. The project is currently reviewing the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine.

“Trusting the AMA and the Vaccine Integrity Project to objectively review vaccine safety feels a lot like asking the fox to guard the henhouse,” said Nebraska chiropractor Ben Tapper.

Mack Rosenberg said the repeated failures of such organizations to “truly and comprehensively” analyze vaccine safety data have led to “increasing distrust among the public — and with good reason.”

AMA ‘a political force,’ not a ‘neutral medical association’

In 2025, the AMA spent nearly $24 million on lobbying, making it one of the top 10 groups trying to influence government policy, according to OpenSecrets.

“This is not the behavior of a neutral medical association. It is the strategy of a political force,” wrote Jason Altmire in an op-ed for RealClearHealth.

Altmire, a former hospital and health insurance executive who served in the U.S. House of Representatives, is an adjunct professor of healthcare management at the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center.

Tapper questioned whether the AMA and the Vaccine Integrity Project would sufficiently assess the safety of vaccines.

For many people, the concern isn’t that vaccines can have benefits, he said. “The concern is whether safety data is fully transparent, whether adverse event reporting is thoroughly investigated, whether conflicts of interest are disclosed and whether risk-benefit analyses are stratified appropriately by age and health status.”

The AMA, which touted 2024 revenues of $546 million, was criticized during the COVID-19 pandemic for deferring to political ideology rather than medical facts.

Its “AMA COVID-19 Guide: Background/Messaging on Vaccines, Vaccine Clinical Trials & Combatting Vaccine Misinformation” encouraged doctors to use certain words and avoid others. For instance, “stay-at-home order” replaced “lockdown,” and “deaths” replaced “hospitalization rates.”

The AMA in August 2025 was disinvited from the CDC’s vaccine advisory committee’s workgroups.

This article was originally published by The Defender — Children’s Health Defense’s News & Views Website under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Please consider subscribing to The Defender or donating to Children’s Health Defense.

February 16, 2026 Posted by | Deception, Science and Pseudo-Science | , , | Leave a comment

Macron, Merz, and von der Leyen Defend Expanded Speech Controls

The Munich Security Conference just became a defense session for Europe’s most ambitious censorship regime

By Dan Frieth | Reclaim The Net | February 16, 2026

Emmanuel Macron stood before the Munich Security Conference last week and offered a blueprint for what European governments should be allowed to delete from the internet. The French president wants mandatory identity verification for social media users, one account per person, algorithm transparency on the government’s terms, and the legal authority to block platforms that refuse to comply.

“We have to be sure there is one single person with one account,” Macron said. “If this is an AI system, if this is bot or organized by big organization, it should be just forbidden.”

The statement describes a system where every social media user would have their identity verified by platforms and tied to a single permitted account. Anonymous speech, pseudonymous commentary, and the ability to maintain separate personal and professional presences online would effectively end for anyone using platforms that serve the European market.

Macron suggested this as a way to protect democracy. The mechanism would give governments a powerful tool to identify, track, and silence any user whose speech they find objectionable.

France is moving to ban social media access for anyone under 15, a policy that requires verifying every user. Macron defended this by characterizing free expression online as a form of brainwashing.

“Free speech would mean I will give the mind, brand the heart of my teenagers to algorithm of big guys,” he said. “I’m not totally sure I share the values, or Chinese algorithm without any control. We are crazy.”

The argument runs as follows: letting young people encounter ideas online without government permission is insanity. The solution requires every user to prove their age to access platforms where public discussion happens.

Macron suggested that speech illegal in newspapers should remain illegal when moved online. “How is that the craziest and most harmful narratives can go unchecked in our digital space, where they will fall under the law if published in print?”

The question assumes “harmful narratives” is a category the government should define. It also assumes the government should have the power to prevent people from encountering ideas it has labeled crazy.

Macron invoked the Digital Services Act as the foundation for expanded censorship across Europe. “This is a very important regulation because for the first time we created the framework to regulate this platform.”

The DSA gives EU regulators the authority to demand content removal from platforms. Macron called for going further: using the law to “excuse those who clearly decide not to respect our rules and our regulation” and to “block all those [who allow] interferences in our systems.”

He offered a familiar list of speech categories he wants suppressed: “racist speech, hateful speech, anti-Semitic speech.” These terms have no fixed legal definition that applies uniformly across EU member states. Who is racist, what constitutes hatred, which criticism of which policies counts as anti-Semitism: these determinations would be made by regulators and platforms operating under government pressure.

Macron described limits on speech as somehow inherent to democracy itself: “When you have free speech, you have respect, you have rules, and the limit of my freedom is the beginning of your freedom.”

This formulation treats speech as equivalent to physical coercion. Your words are framed as a boundary violation against others simply by existing. The speech that most requires protection is speech that offends, that challenges consensus, that the powerful would prefer to suppress. Macron’s framework offers no protection for any of it.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who opened the conference, echoed the European position that speech protections should end where government-defined values begin.

“A divide has opened up between Europe and the United States,” Merz said. “And Vice President JD Vance said this very openly here at the Munich Security Conference a year ago, and he was right. The battle of cultures of MAGA in the US is not ours. Freedom of speech here ends where the words spoken are directed against human dignity and our basic law.”

“Human dignity” is the phrase German law uses to justify prosecuting speech. The Constitutional Court has interpreted it to cover insults, Holocaust denial, and an expanding category of expression that authorities determine undermines respect for persons or groups. It is the legal mechanism under which German police have raided homes over social media posts and prosecuted people for memes.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen joined the censorship chorus with a declaration of territorial authority over online expression.

“I want to be very clear: our digital sovereignty is our digital sovereignty,” she said, adding the EU “will not flinch where this is concerned.”

Von der Leyen described European speech regulation as under attack from the United States, “which has wielded the threats of tariffs on partners to secure preferential access and has decried the EU’s digital rules as an assault on free speech.”

The EU’s digital rules are an assault on free speech. The DSA empowers bureaucrats to demand platforms remove content, under threat of massive fines.

The EU has opened formal proceedings against X for its policies. European regulators have forced platforms to suppress content that would be legally protected in the United States.

Von der Leyen framed resistance to this regime as a threat to Europe’s “democratic foundation.” She claimed Europe has “a long tradition in freedom of speech” while defending a legal structure designed to ensure certain speech never reaches European audiences.

“The European way of life – our democratic foundation and the trust of our citizens – is being challenged in new ways,” she said. “On everything from territories to tariffs or tech regulations.”

The phrasing groups speech regulation with tariffs and territorial disputes. All three are matters where Europe will defend its sovereignty. What Europeans are permitted to say, read, and share online is treated as equivalent to where national borders fall.

The leaders who gathered in Munich spoke of protecting democracy while proposing tools that would let governments identify and punish dissent. They invoked free speech while demanding the power to decide which speech is free. They claimed to defend Europe while stripping Europeans of the ability to speak freely online.

February 16, 2026 Posted by | Civil Liberties, Ethnic Cleansing, Racism, Zionism, Full Spectrum Dominance | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Keir Starmer-tied think tank paid PR firm to target The Grayzone

By Kit Klarenberg | The Grayzone | February 16, 2026

Leaked files have revealed that Labour Together, the shadowy think tank run by disgraced former top Keir Starmer aide Morgan McSweeney, paid the Washington DC-based corporate intelligence firm APCO Worldwide to spy on journalists who reported on their corrupt handling of campaign finances.

The reporters named appear to have been targeted for their efforts to investigate how the UK’s Labour Party elites spent 730,000 pounds in undeclared donations to install Starmer as their leader.

The files show APCO used those funds to oversee the fabrication of a dodgy, evidence-free dossier claiming that Russia was behind damaging disclosures about Labour Together, which it submitted to the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) of Britain’s GCHQ — London’s equivalent to the US National Security Agency.

The “significant persons of interest” listed in APCO’s McCarthyite casebook included The Grayzone and myself.

According to my APCO dossier, “While a self described ‘investigative journalist,’ he is an author for the Gray Zone. The site has been described as a ‘conspiracy blog’ and ‘Wagner propaganda channel.’ In 2023,” the dossier reads, I “was arrested by counter-terror police after [I] arrived in the UK.”

APCO bills itself as “a trusted and strategic advisor… that drive[s] our clients’ missions and objectives forward.” Despite its massive contract with Labour Together, the files show the PR firm struggled to identify its targets, and proved unable to establish the most basic facts about them.

When APCO branded The Grayzone as “Wagner propaganda,” it seemed to have confused us with “Grey Zone,” an entirely unrelated and now-defunct Telegram channel affiliated with the Russian military contractor. APCO also claimed I was “arrested by counter-terrorism police” in May 2023 upon returning to Britain. In fact, I had been detained, not arrested.

APCO also targeted journalists Matt Taibbi and Paul Holden, who led investigations into Labour Together’s potentially criminal activities, based on leaks and Freedom of Information requests. The PR firm had sought to secure “leverage” over Holden in order to sabotage his work.

The spying scandal began in November 2023, when Britain’s Sunday Times revealed that Keir Starmer’s campaign manager, Morgan McSweeney, had failed to declare £730,000 in campaign donations which he diverted to advance Starmer’s rise to Labour leadership. One month later, APCO prepared a memo for Labour Together outlining a strategy to blame the damaging disclosure on Russian hackers and attack the journalists who dared to publish details of the offending documents.

The story was given new life in February 2026, when British journalist Peter Geoghehan exposed a secret contract showing Labour Together paid APCO £30,000 to investigate the journalists it blamed for exposing its legally questionable activities.

It has now gone mainstream, with the Sunday Times publishing a lengthy report branding the Labour operation as a “dirty smear” based on a “lie” about Russian hacking.

However, the Times article omitted any mention of this reporter or The Grayzone, even though we were prominently targeted by Labour Together. In the following investigation, we explain why The Grayzone was targeted, tracing the origins of the slimy spying operation to a network of Labourite operatives who have sought to destroy us since well before Starmer came to power.

“Familiar with masters of the same drivers”

Labour Together was founded in 2015 by McSweeney, Starmer’s longtime svengali. After several failed campaigns for establishment candidates, McSweeney managed to transform his organization into a propaganda juggernaut, soliciting large donations from the UK Israel lobby’s most significant moneyman, Trevor Chinn.

While presenting his campaigning outfit as a plucky little think tank, he wielded it against Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and the movement behind him. To neutralize the ecosystem of alternative media outlets supporting Corbyn as Labour leader, Labour Together contracted a political operative named Imran Ahmed to spin out a censorship front called “Stop Funding Fake News.”

After weaponizing dubious charges of antisemitism to defund one of the most influential pro-Corbyn outlets, Canary UK, the organization folded, then resurfaced as the much bolder Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH). Based inside the office of Labour Together, CCDH relied on the funding from Chinn and, as The Grayzone’s Max Blumenthal revealed, secretly coordinated with the Israeli embassy in Washington.

McSweeney entered Downing Street as Starmer’s Chief of Staff just one month before Trump’s re-election. Among his most important tasks was repairing relations with the US President. At the time, Trump’s aides were bristling over reports that McSweeney met with Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris during the Democratic National Convention to plot strategy. One of Trump’s top donors, the transhumanist mega-billionaire Elon Musk, also had his knives out for McSweeney after journalists Matt Taibbi and Paul Thacker revealed that CCDH’s top priority for 2024 was to “kill Elon Musk’s Twitter.”

McSweeney’s solution was to dispatch one of Labour’s most seasoned – and scandal-stained – fixers to Washington. He was Lord Peter Mandelson, the architect of the neoliberal New Labour wave whose notoriously transactional tendencies seemed to make him the perfect match for Trump. Mandelson made himself a fixture at Butterworth’s, a favorite Capitol Hill haunt of MAGA operatives, and insinuated himself into Trumpist social circles.

In June 2025, the restaurant erected a plaque honoring Mandelson during a ceremony overseen by Raheem Kassam, a close associate of former Trump chief of staff Steve Bannon. There, a mirthful Mandelson raised a toast and proclaimed a special kinship with the MAGA elite: “Although we don’t have identical politics, we are familiar with masters of the same drivers that brought our respective figures to power — President Trump in your case and Keir Starmer in mine.”

But Mandelson was also dogged by the same sex trafficking figure who constantly inhabited the personal lives of both Trump and Bannon: Jeffrey Epstein. Both McSweeney and Starmer had been keenly aware of the ambassador’s friendship with Epstein, but they dismissed the concerns, even ignoring a warning from UK security services.

However, when a series of emails confirming Mandelson’s friendship with Epstein poured forth as part of a release by the US Department of Justice, the ambassador’s position became untenable. Following his firing in September 2025, a new tranche of emails published this January provided an even more damning portrait of their friendship. They showed, for instance, that Epstein channeled money to Mandelson’s husband, Reinaldo Avila da Silva, for a specious initiative which was never completed. Even worse, the communications exposed Mandelson providing Epstein with advance notice of the impending collapse of Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s government in 2010, as well as sensitive information about the UK’s “saleable assets.”

McSweeney’s scheming had finally caught up with him. Though Starmer initially praised and defended his longtime campaign guru in parliament, he caved soon after, forcing McSweeney to resign his post on February 8.

In the days since, Starmer has been unable to fill the vacancy. Meanwhile, another senior Labour official is reportedly considering leaving his role as well. Amid the chaos, British media has begun to speculate that the Prime Minister will be next to go.

Will the revelation of Labour Together’s media enemies list, and its secret contract with APCO, be the weight that finally sinks Starmer?

Labour Together’s misdirection ploy: blame Russia

McSweeney was aware that Labour Together had secretly contracted APCO to spy on journalists; however, he didn’t carry out the dirty work himself. That job appears to have been commissioned by his successor at the think tank, Josh Simons, who’s now a senior minister in Starmer’s government.

Simons has dismissed reports that the PR firm was tasked with spying on reporters as “nonsense,” insisting that APCO was merely “asked to look into a suspected illegal hack.” Simons’ disingenuous claims are undermined by newly-leaked documents related to the probe, however.

Perhaps most damning is a December 2023 memo prepared by APCO for Labour Together which shows investigators fretting about “recent articles and blog posts” which threatened to draw attention to the political group’s questionable funding schemes. Information published by these meddling journalists, particularly Paul Holden, “[raised] concern about the source of his information and what more he may choose to publish in the future,” the memo continued.

It was therefore deemed “important to identify the source of the information and to ascertain what additional information could be published.” Labour Together tasked APCO with probing several journalists, dubbed “significant persons of interest.”

The memo speculated that Holden and others may have received leaks from inside Labour Together, Labour party headquarters, parliament, or “illegally-gathered information collected” from a purported “hack” of Britain’s Electoral Commission in 2023. APCO concluded it was “essential” for Labour Together to concoct a strategy to counter the critical reporting.

Its response was to blame the organization’s woes on a Russian hack. But rather than hiring a cyber-security firm to investigate the supposed data breach, it contracted a corporate intelligence firm to attack the messengers.

In February 2024, The Guardian contacted Holden to alert him that the paper was preparing a hit piece alleging he was under investigation by the NCSC for receiving illegally obtained information from Russia. The Guardian had clearly been influenced by briefings from Labour Together, as well as by APCO’s report. Yet the outlet backed off when Holden promised to sue them for defamation.

APCO is now under formal investigation for potential standards breaches by Britain’s Public Relations and Communication Association.

How did The Grayzone wind up on Labour Together’s enemies list?

It is unclear how and why I became a “significant person of interest” in APCO and Labour Together’s secret smear campaign. However, their operation dovetailed with another surreptitious attempt by intelligence-tied actors to smear The Grayzone as Russian agents.

I have never spoken to Paul Holden or other journalists named as the firm’s targets, or conducted any journalistic investigations into Labour Together’s corrupt financial dealings. When APCO initiated its probe, I had mentioned Labour Together in a single article months prior that focused on the organization’s censorship-obsessed spinoff, the Center for Countering Digital Hate.

Such sloppiness and paranoia is the hallmark of Amil Khan, a veteran British government psyops warrior turned “disinformation expert” involved with Labour Together and Starmer’s Labour.

Khan cut his teeth running covert British-funded psychological warfare operations during the Syrian dirty war, supporting violent extremist groups armed and financed by the CIA and MI6. He subsequently founded Valent Projects, which “specializes in addressing online manipulation.” Khan’s outfit produced a paper on social media ratfucking strategies for Labour Together entitled, “Power and Persuasion: Understanding the Right’s Playbook.”

In December 2021, The Grayzone exposed how Valent Projects covertly produced Covid vaccine propaganda funded by the British monarchy’s Royal Institute, using then-popular “BreadTube” personality Abigail Thorn as the front person for its campaign. The investigation apparently placed this outlet in the crosshairs of Khan and his information warfare network.

Less than a year later, The Grayzone exposed Khan again – this time, for his role in a covert conspiracy to destroy us. Enlisted by celebrity former leftist journalist Paul Mason, Khan helped coordinate a harebrained scheme to demonetize and deplatform The Grayzone. The pair discussed going “full nuclear legal to squeeze [The Grayzone] financially,” and proposed publishing intelligence agency-sourced smears to delegitimize this outlet.

As their revenge plot approached its paranoid apogee, Mason and Khan fantasized about hosting an anti-Grayzone summit with some of the most rabid, intelligence-tied opponents of our reporting. Among those they pitched for the gathering was Imran Ahmed, director of the censorship-obsessed Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), which was founded by Morgan McSweeney and shared an office with his Labour Together.

While it is unknown if the anti-Grayzone summit ever took place, we have since learned that Mason enlisted a team of high-priced London lawyers to sue this outlet just days after our article exposing his secret smear campaign appeared. In May 2023, I was detained at the UK’s Luton International Airport and interrogated about The Grayzone’s activities by counter-terror police. Six months later, APCO initiated its covert investigation of me, The Grayzone, and others whose reporting had wound them up on the Labour Together enemies list.

APCO has so far remained silent about the scandal. The Grayzone has submitted a request for comment to Tom Short, the PR firm’s London chief. We received an automated response revealing he conveniently slipped away to the US. Upon Short’s return to Britain, APCO will no longer be able to hide behind bogus allegations of Russian hacking.

February 16, 2026 Posted by | Civil Liberties, Corruption, Deception, Full Spectrum Dominance, Russophobia | , , , | Leave a comment

‘Israel’ threatens to genocide Gaza if Hamas refuses disarmament

Al Mayadeen | February 16, 2026

Senior Israeli officials have threatened to renew the genocide in Gaza if Hamas does not disarm within a proposed 60-day period, although the Israeli occupation continues its attacks on the Strip daily, never adhering to the ceasefire agreement.

Cabinet Secretary Yossi Fuchs, a senior adviser to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said that the occupation government intends to give Hamas two months to relinquish its arms. If it does not comply, the Israeli military would “complete the mission” in Gaza, he threatened.

The warnings came against the backdrop of the US-led “Board of Peace”, under which Washington dictated the 60-day deadline.

According to Fuchs, Hamas would be required to surrender all weapons, including small arms such as AK-47 rifles. He emphasized that the Israeli regime would evaluate the outcome at the end of the period.

Netanyahu also reiterated that disarmament must include small arms, claiming that such weapons were used during the October 7 operation. Israeli officials allege that tens of thousands of rifles remain in Gaza.

Reports in The New York Times suggested that a draft proposal discussed by US mediators could initially allow Hamas to retain some small arms while surrendering weapons deemed capable of striking “Israel”. The document is reportedly expected to be shared with the Palestinian Resistance in the coming weeks.

Devastation and aggression despite ceasefire

Despite the ceasefire agreement, officially effective as of October 11, 2025, the Israeli regime has maintained its occupation of vast areas across the Gaza Strip, and continues to attack the Palestinian territory’s infrastructure and civilians.

Since then, over 591 Palestinians, including women and children, have been killed, and more than 1,598 others have been injured.

Since October 7, 2023, more than 72,051 Palestinians have been killed, and over 171,706 have been injured, making the war on Gaza one of the most brutal in modern history.  Many victims are still in dire need of treatment. However, hospitals across Gaza have been systematically targeted over the past three years, forcing operations to minimal function, sometimes to a halt.

February 16, 2026 Posted by | Ethnic Cleansing, Racism, Zionism, War Crimes | , , , , | Leave a comment

Apple Just Bought A Sinister ‘Pre-Speech’ Tech Company Implicated In Genocide

By Nate Bear – ¡Do Not Panic! – February 15, 2026

Tech giant Apple has quietly paid nearly $2 billion for a ‘pre-speech’ tech company whose employees helped Israel commit genocide in Gaza.

And Apple has paid this money, the second-biggest deal in its history, for a company that doesn’t have a product, doesn’t have any revenues and whose website is a single page containing 15 words.

The company, Q.ai, is developing sensors which map the imperceptible movements of a human face to determine the words someone is thinking before they’re spoken.

They call it silent speech.

Or pre-speech.

And it’s exactly as sinister as you think it is.

Q.ai was founded by Aviad Maizels, Avi Barliya and Yonatan Wexler, all of whom honed their skills by testing technologies of apartheid on Palestinians. Maizels is a former commander of Unit 81, the IDF division which builds Israel’s offensive cyber weapons. Barliya, according to his LinkedIn, was an intelligence officer in the Israeli air force, while Wexler is a former Unit 8200 agent.

Apple’s genocide intake

In a blog post announcing the deal, Tom Hulme, an executive at Google Ventures, one of the company’s early investors, revealed that 30% of Q.ai’s more than 100 staff were called up to participate in the genocide of Gaza.

This admission means dozens of people implicated in genocidal acts who served under the political command of Yoav Gallant, an ICC indicted war criminal, are now Apple employees.

It should be a huge scandal. The biggest company in the US, one of the world’s most recognisable names, has folded into its staff dozens of people who served in a military during the period it committed genocide, according to all of the world’s most acclaimed rights experts.

But every single mainstream article which covered news of the deal, from Reuters to the FT, ignored this fact.

Mainstream coverage also ignored a number of other extremely cogent elements to the story, including the nature of the deal and the technology itself.

Apple has paid two billion dollars for something that barely appears to exist.

Q.ai’s website consists of just 15 words.

To find out exactly what the company does you have to look beyond the press releases to the patents Q.ai and its founders have filed.

And these patents read like plot lines from the bleakest dystopian futures.

Sensing silent speech

One filing details technology capable of “determining an emotional state of an individual based on facial skin micromovements.” The same filing says the technology could be used “to identify a user based on heart-rate and breathing-rate.” Another filing says Q.ai’s software “synthesises speech in response to words articulated silently by the test subject.”

Q.ai’s technology centres around silent speech.

This is the idea that before we vocalise words and move our mouths to emit sounds, our brain has already sent signals to muscles in our throat and face determining what we’re going to say. Q.ai claims to have invented infrared sensors that can pick up these pre-speech micro-movements.

One filing talks about a “sensing device configured to fit an ear of a user, with an optical sensing head which senses light reflected from the face and outputs a signal in response. Processing circuitry processes the signal to generate a speech output.”

Tech bloggers have suggested Apple has bought the company to enable non-verbal control of an iPhone and other devices via its airpod earphones or smart glasses. An annotated diagram included with the patent shows a person wearing glasses and an earpiece integrated with the technology.

Indeed Apple is no stranger to adopting the technologies of Israeli apartheid, and in fact the company is extremely familiar with Maizels himself.

In 2013, Apple bought Maizels’s first company, PrimeSense, a developer of 3D sensing technology. PrimeSense technology went on to become the foundation for Apple’s Face ID system on its newer iPhone and iPad models.

Nonetheless, two billion dollars for a non-existent technology and a three-year old company, is unprecedented. What isn’t unprecedented, however, is a US tech giant overpaying for an Israeli company.

Overpriced Israeli tech

Last year, Google bought Israeli cybersecurity Wiz for $32 billion, which, at 64 times Wiz’s annual sales, was widely seen as an inflated price and far in excess of the sales-to-valuation ratio for similar companies.

At this price, however, Israel received a huge $5 billion tax windfall. At the time Zionists crowed it would help the country buy more warplanes and missiles to commit genocide.

The deal for Q.ai, while a lot smaller, will still generate significant tax income for Israel’s struggling economy.

And Israel is critical to Apple.

The company has a large R&D campus in the country, its second-biggest outside the US, into which large numbers of Unit 8200 and Unit 81 graduates are funnelled. Apple CEO Tim Cook is a devoted Zionist, has visited Israel on numerous occasions, and in 2018 received an award from Zionist lobby group the ADL for his efforts to censor anti-Israel speech. Apple has made good on that promise over the last two years, sacking staff for expressing pro-Palestine, anti-genocide views. Cook has never spoken about Gaza.

The price for a ghost company with a few patents, then, looks as much about politics as it does about technology.

That’s not to say Q.ai’s technology won’t be commercialised for consumer applications. It probably will be. And if the tech is realised, the implications for privacy and data collection are frightening.

As are the security state and military applications.

A pre-crime future

A few days after the Q.ai deal, the head of neurotechnology at Israel’s directorate of defense research and development, the country’s equivalent to the US’s DARPA programme, gave her first-ever interview to Israeli media. In the interview she referenced Q.ai and said the Israeli military is working on similar technology. The US has a DARPA project known as Silent Talk which is also working to develop pre-speech sensing and non-verbal control technologies.

Once the technology is developed, and pre-speech established as a legitimate biological human function, how far behind will pre-crime be?

Given the frenzied efforts we’ve seen to shut down and criminalise criticism of Israel under the guise of antisemitism, one can easily imagine a future of pre-speech sensing technology being rolled out to identify would-be critics of Israel. Or the US. Or Europe. Or imperialism in general.

You can imagine it now. “Based on our silent speech detector we have determined you were going to say something hateful or antisemitic or un-American and are therefore under arrest.”

The most dystopian technologies continue to flow out of Israel. And they continue to flow because Israel is empowered by the US and Europe to maintain a system of apartheid built upon invasive and authoritarian technologies of control.

It is therefore no surprise that the creators of Q.ai are veterans of Israel’s genocidal military security state, or that the largest company in the US sees these technologies as essential to its AI future.

And while this story may be no surprise, we should never get used to, and must resist, technologies of apartheid and genocide, and their creators, becoming embedded in our devices, our economies and our lives.

February 16, 2026 Posted by | Full Spectrum Dominance | , , , | Leave a comment