Sunday, 4 September 2022 • 15:30 — The New Dark Age
There may be some duplication due to cross-posting and may be updated throughout the day, so please check back. If it gets updated, I usually insert the time on the line above. A lot of cross-posting usually indicates that the article is popular and some links may not work, depending on your location but at least you have some idea of the scale of censorship now operating in the ‘democratic’ West.
Liz Truss won’t have it easy as the UK’s new prime minister
https://www.rt.com/news/562203-liz-truss-uk-boris-johnson/
EU country warns citizens of ten ‘difficult winters’ ahead
https://www.rt.com/news/562202-citizens-belgium-warns-citizens/
Kherson ‘Counteroffensive’ – Zelenski Is Going For Broke
https://www.moonofalabama.org/2022/09/kherson-counteroffensive-zelenski-goes-for-broke.html

BP directors meet in London, 1960. (Photo: Central Press / Getty)
For the past month, there have been bitter political disputes in Iraq that have divided and polarized different communities, making it impossible to elect representatives to the country’s highest bodies. These divisions have deeply engrained themselves into the different strata of the society through social media, creating disputes and barriers not only between communities but also between ordinary Iraqis, preventing them from achieving social cohesion, partnership in governance, and socioeconomic integration. As a result, Iraqis experience high levels of hopelessness and frustration with their state. The current Iraqi government has little chance of addressing the current challenges and problems. The low voter turnout in the last Iraqi elections in October 2021, especially among the younger population, is a clear indication that people no longer trust the current state institutions and political parties.

George Bahgoury (Egypt), Untitled, 2015.
Yamal LNG Project in Siberia, Russia (File photo)
