Sunday, February 15, 2026

Top British and German Military Chiefs Press ‘Moral’ Case for Rearmament

THE GUARDIAN: Defence chiefs write joint appeal urging public to prepare for threat of war with Russia with attendant costs

Britain and Germany’s highest ranking military chiefs have made an unprecedented joint appeal to the public to accept the “moral” case for rearmament and prepare for the threat of war with Russia.

The pair said they were making the plea not just as the military leaders of two of Europe’s largest military spenders, but “as voices for a Europe that must now confront uncomfortable truths about its security”.

Air Chief Marshal Richard Knighton, the UK’s chief of the defence staff, and Gen Carsten Breuer, Germany’s chief of defence, said Russia’s military stance had “shifted decisively westward” and a “step change” was needed in Europe’s defence and security.

In a joint article published in the Guardian and the German newspaper Die Welt, in the wake of the Munich Security Conference, the soldiers said they had a duty “to explain what is at stake so that the public could understand why the UK and Germany have committed to the biggest sustained increases in defence spending since the end of the cold war”.

“There is a moral dimension to this endeavour. Rearmament is not warmongering; it is the responsible action of nations determined to protect their people and preserve peace,” they write.

There is significant reluctance among voters in Britain and Germany to accept economic pain in return for rearmament, even while majorities in both countries believe the outbreak of a third world war is more likely than not in the next five years. » | Ben Quinn, Political correspondent | Sunday, February 15, 2026

La princesse Maud de Galles et le donneur de sperme : la nouvelle ombre qui plane sur le royaume de Norvège

MADAME FIGARO : La famille royale de Norvège pourrait faire face à un nouveau scandale. Un livre qui devrait être publié prochainement, questionnerait la légitimité du règne des membres du clan.

Après les liens entre la princesse Mette-Marit et Jeffrey Epstein, et le procès de Marius Borg Høiby pour viol, la famille royale de Norvège pourrait bien faire face à de nouvelles polémiques. Selon le Daily Mail , au cours de l’année 2026, une biographie de la princesse Maud de Galles, écrite par l’historienne Arnhild Skre, qui questionne la légitimité du règne des membres du clan, devrait sortir. L’auteure aurait enquêté sur celle qui fut reine consort de Norvège de 1905 à 1938 en tant qu’épouse d’Haakon VII, grand-mère de l’actuel roi Harald V, et qui aurait eu recours à un donneur de sperme, en 1902, pour donner naissance à son fils, Olav V. Mais d’où vient cette histoire ? » | Par Leonie Dutrievoz | dimanche 15 février 2026

WIKIPEDIA : Maud of Wales »

EU's Kallas Refutes US Portrayal of Europe in Decline at the Munich Security Conference (MSC) 2026 | DW News

Feb 15, 2026 | With transatlantic ties strained, Saturday's keynote speech at the Munich Security Conference by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio was highly-anticipated. He struck a conciliatory yet critical tone of Europe while Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenksyy also took to the stage, calling Russian President Putin a "slave to war."

But the EU's foreign policy chief is pushing back against the US's portrayal of Europe in decline - a day after Washington's top diplomat criticized the bloc's immigration and climate policies. Kaja Kallas said Europe is "not facing civilizational erasure" and that "Europe bashing had become fashionable in certain political circles." But she added that the much-anticipated speech by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the conference "reassured" transatlantic ties.


Steve Schmidt & Jason Crow: Trump Doesn't See A Problem He Thinks He Can't Bomb His Way Out Of

Steve Schmidt sits down with ‪@ rep jason crow‬, a former Army Ranger and Bronze Star recipient, to talk about the prospect of Donald Trump using the US military or engaging in conflict to distract from the chaos sweeping his administration.

Sturm aufs Kapitol: Der Preis, den er zahlte | Doku NZZ Format

Feb 13, 2026 | «NZZ Format» erzählt die Geschichte von drei Polizisten, die beim Sturm auf das US Capitol vor einem Jahr verletzt wurden. Einer von ihnen hat sich nur wenige Tage nach den gewaltsamen Protesten das Leben genommen. Die zwei anderen kämpfen noch heute mit physischen und psychischen Folgen. Zusammen mit Online-Rechercheuren machen sich die Polizisten und Angehörigen auf eine Spurensuche. Sie wollen herausfinden, was genau am 6. Januar 2021 passiert ist. Dabei stossen sie auf brisante Details: Einer der Polizisten wurde von Demonstranten mit einem Taser angegriffen, ein anderer von einer Metallstange getroffen. In den tausenden Videos findet das Team auch Spuren zu genau den Trump-Anhängern, die sie persönlich angegriffen haben. Zu erfahren, was an dem Tag genau passiert ist, ist für die Polizisten und Angehörigen eine Erlösung. Doch nicht alle Narben heilen.

Der Film stammt aus dem Jahr 2021.


Cacio e Pepe : How to Get This Classic Italian Recipe Right

Feb 14, 2026 | Purist, creamy, full of flavor: Cacio e Pepe is Rome's signature pasta dish. Less is more here—and that's exactly what makes it tricky. We show you how to master this classic dish, why its simplicity makes it an art form, and how to really drive Italian chefs crazy.

Trump’s Relentless Self-Promotion Fosters an American Cult of Personality

THE NEW YORK TIMES: President Trump has engaged in a spree of self-aggrandizement unlike any of his predecessors, fostering a mythologized superhuman persona and making himself the inescapable force at home and around the world.

The racist online video that President Trump recently shared and then deleted generated a bipartisan furor because of its portrayal of Barack and Michelle Obama as apes. What was little remarked on was how it presented Mr. Trump himself — as the “King of the Jungle.”

After a year back in the White House, Mr. Trump’s efforts to promote himself as the singularly dominant figure in the world have become so commonplace that they no longer seem surprising. He regularly depicts himself in a heroic, almost godly fashion, as a king, as a Superman, as a Jedi knight, as a military hero, even as a pope in a white cassock.

While Mr. Trump has spent a lifetime promoting his personal brand, slapping his name on hotels, casinos, airplanes, even steaks, neckties and bottled water, what he is doing in his second term as president comes closer to building a cult of personality the likes of which has never been seen in American history. Other presidents sought to cultivate their reputations, but none went as far as Mr. Trump has to create a mythologized, superhuman and omnipresent persona leading to idolatry.

His picture has been splashed all over the White House, on multistory banners on the side of federal buildings, on annual passes to national parks and maybe even soon on a one-dollar coin. His name has been etched on the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, on the U.S. Institute of Peace, on federal investment accounts, special visas and a discount drug program and, if he has his way, on Washington Dulles International Airport and Penn Station in New York. » | Peter Baker | Peter Baker, the chief White House correspondent, is covering his sixth presidency. He reported from Washington. }Sunday, February 15, 2026

Trump’s Relationship with Allies in ‘Worst Place Ever’ | Former US Ambassador

Feb 14, 2026 | “A majority of Europeans now look at the US as a threat rather than a friend.”

The US is in the “worst place we’ve ever been in terms of standing with our allies”, says former US ambassador Matthew Bryza, as allies have “lost faith” in transatlantic unity.



Marco Rubio’s FULL SPEECH and MY COMMENT on it here.

Trump News at a Glance: Danish PM Believes US President Still Wants to Own Greenland

THE GUARDIAN: Mette Frederiksen and her Greenlandic counterpart, Jens-Frederik Nielsen, said the pressure on the island’s people was “unacceptable”. Key US politics stories from 14 February at a glance

Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen has said she believes Donald Trump still wants to own Greenland, despite dialling back his recent threats to seize it by force.

Asked at the Munich Security Conference if the US president still wanted to own the Arctic island, Frederiksen said: “Unfortunately, I think the desire is the same.” » | Guardian staff | Sunday, February 15, 2026

Opioid Crisis in the US - Business & Addiction (1/2) | DW Documentary

Feb 7, 2026 | The United States has a huge drug problem: cheap opioids, thousands of deaths. President Trump blames Latin American cartels. But it all began 30 years ago, quite legally, in the United States.

The Sackler family, owners of Purdue Pharma, brought the prescription painkiller OxyContin - containing the highly potent opioid oxycodone - onto the market, unleashing one of the greatest health disasters in the history of the United States. With hundreds of sales representatives, they pressured doctors in economically disadvantaged regions to prescribe the drug.

One of the film's protagonists is Dr Lou Ortenzio, who was himself part of this machinery: he brought the drug to his town of Clarksburg before becoming addicted himself. Former sales representatives, now whistle-blowers, report how they lied to doctors and claimed that Oxy was not addictive.

A perfectly oiled machine got millions of Americans hooked - and deceived an entire country. Prosecutors like Maura Healey describe their fight to stop Purdue and bring the Sacklers to justice. The investigations reveal a network of power and influence: Purdue secretly received support from McKinsey, consulting firm to the powerful, and from Publicis, a major advertising agency.

Through exclusive interviews, insider accounts and previously unpublished archive material, this two-part documentary reveals how the Sacklers bribed regulators, pushed Oxy and evaded justice despite overwhelming evidence. The two-part documentary tells the story of a crisis that continues to devastate parts of American society to this day.


How $40-a-Pack Cigarettes Pushed Australians to the Black Market

THE NEW YORK TIMES: ax hikes made cigarettes in Australia the most expensive in the world. They have also helped fuel a multibillion-dollar criminal enterprise in bootleg tobacco.

Screenshot taken from this article. | Matthew Abbott for the New York Times

A retired math teacher descended into an underground parking lot in search of her dealer, cash in hand.

Headlights flashed from the far end of the garage in a beachside, middle-class neighborhood in suburban Melbourne, Australia. She walked up to an unmarked van and soon was back above ground with the illicit goods.

A carton of cigarettes.

Australia has the most expensive cigarettes in the world, a pack of midmarket cigarettes costing on average about 55 Australian dollars, or almost $40, nearly double what it will set you back in New York City. A series of steep tax hikes — eight in 10 years — were put in place to reduce the rate of smoking, which has steadily declined. But the high prices have also given rise to a thriving black market now estimated to be a multibillion-dollar industry that accounts for as much as half of all tobacco sales in the country.

“It’s the injustice of the situation,” said the retired teacher, Pat Felvus, 75, who recounted in an interview her early experiences of buying illegal cigarettes, which cost as little as 10 Australian dollars a pack. “Why would you pay four times the amount?”

Bootleg cigarettes are readily available on every main street in Australia — at convenience stores, candy shops and tobacconists. Competition has driven the price of under-the-counter smokes lower and lower, at a time that the cost for staples is rising. Violence has erupted between organized crime groups jostling for a slice of the lucrative market, with a spate of firebombings, extortion, shootings and homicides.

The scale of the black market and the criminality has raised questions about how far governments can raise so-called sin taxes to curb undesirable behaviors. Australia is now facing the quandary: Are the high cigarette prices doing more harm than good? » | Victoria Kim | Reporting from Geelong and Melbourne, Australia | Sunday, February 15, 2026

Gaggles of stupid politicians in parliaments around the world make stupid political decisions and thus make for stupid governance! Alas, you can’t fix stupid! — © Mark Alexander

No Fuel, No Tourists, No Cash – This Was the Week the Cuban Crisis Got Real

THE GUARDIAN: Diplomats in Havana are preparing for an alternative Trump tactic: the country being starved until people take to the streets and the US can step in

Among the verdant gardens of Havana’s diplomatic quarter, Siboney, ambassadors from countries traditionally allied to the United States are expressing increasing frustration with Washington’s attempt to unseat Cuba’s government, while simultaneously drawing up plans to draw down their missions.

Cuba is in crisis. Already reeling from a four-year economic slump, worsened by hyper-inflation and the migration of nearly 20% of the population, the 67-year-old communist government is at its weakest. After Washington’s successful military operation against Cuba’s ally Venezuela at the beginning of January, the US administration is actively seeking regime change.

The Guardian spoke to more than five top-level officials from different countries, and heard complaints that the US charge d’affaires, Mike Hammer, has failed to share any sort of detailed plan beyond bringing the island to a standstill by starving it of oil. One said: “There’s talk of human rights, and that this is the year Cuba changes – but little talk of what happens afterwards.”

Some hope that rumoured high-level discussions in Mexico between the Cuban government – in the form of Gen Alejandro Castro Espín, son of Cuba’s 94-year-old former president Raúl Castro – and US officials might produce a deal, but as yet there are no signs of progress.

Instead, diplomats in Havana are preparing for an alternative tactic: the country being starved until people take to the streets and the US can step in. “We’re trying to keep a cool head,” said one ambassador. “Embassies are built on planning for the unexpected – hopefully before it becomes expected,” said another. » | Ruaridh Nicoll in Havana | Sunday, February 15, 2026 | Additional reporting by Eileen Sosin

Saturday, February 14, 2026

The Danger of Pam Bondi's Attack on Accountability During Epstein Hearing with Emily Galvin Almanza

Feb 14, 2026 | How does prosecutorial impunity threaten the foundation of American justice? Emily Galvin Almanza, author of The Price of Mercy, exposes the dangerous truth behind a legal system in crisis — where prosecutors often go unpunished for misconduct, and the rules meant to hold the powerful accountable are being ignored.

This eye-opening conversation reveals how the unchecked power of prosecutors and the politicization of justice jeopardize everything from high-profile hearings to everyday law enforcement, creating a justice system that favors impunity over fairness.

Author Emily Galvin Almanza is a public defender and legal expert dedicated to reforming the American justice system, known for her ground-breaking work on wrongful convictions and systemic abuse.



ANTHONY DAVIS can be supported on Patreon here.

Send in the Clowns!

Father David gives us the low down.

Russia Killed Alexei Navalny with Frog Toxin, UK and Four European Allies Say

THE GUARDIAN: Intelligence agencies say deadly toxin in skin of Ecuador dart frogs found in Navalny’s body and highly likely resulted in his death

Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition leader, was killed by dart frog poison administered by the Russian state two years ago, a multi-intelligence agency inquiry has found, according to a statement released by five countries, the UK, France, Germany, Sweden and the Netherlands.

The US was not one of the intelligence agencies making the claim.

Navalny died in a remote Arctic penal colony where he was serving a 19-year sentence. Samples from his body were secured before his burial and sent to the laboratories of two countries. » | Patrick Wintour in Munich | Saturday, February 14, 2026

US-Aussenminister Rubios Botschaft an Europa

Feb 13, 2026 | Auf der Münchner Sicherheitskonferenz atmeten die Europäer nach der Rede von US-Aussenminister Marco Rubio auf, zumal er sich klar für die Nato aussprach. Zugleich machte seine Rede deutlich, dass im transatlantischen Verhältnis weiterhin tiefe Gräben klaffen.

Steve Schmidt & Jim Acosta: Pam Bondi's Jaw-dropping Performance

Feb 14, 2026 | Steve Schmidt joins @jimacosta to reflect on the national disgrace that is Epstein Queen Pam Bondi, as well as @ Save America Mvmt's media blitz against her, Hillbilly Fraud JD Vance, Trump enablers Tim Cook and Ron Lauder, Trump lackey ambassadors in Poland, Denmark and Canada, as well as a message to our friends in Canada. They talked about the campaign strategy, what Democrats need to do to regain power, and more.


Why are there so many bimbos in US government circles? They are like clones of each other! Usually long-haired and blonde, always very right-wing, and almost always dumb! — © Mark Alexander

Dimitra’s Dishes: Flaky Spanakopita Puffs Everyone Loves

February 14, 2026


Click here for the recipe, then click on ‘more’.

Full Speech: Marco Rubio Declares “Europe Must Survive” at Munich Security Conference

Feb 14, 2026 | US Secretary of State Marco Rubio delivers his full address at the Munich Security Conference, stressing Western unity, cultural ties with Europe, reindustrialization, and strategic renewal under President Donald Trump’s vision.

Rubio warns against borderless globalism, urges stronger allies, and calls for rebuilding industries, defence strength, and shared Western identity.



Rubio criticises deindustrialisation. But ask yourselves who were instrumental in bringing it about? It was the titans of industry who are, by and large, profit-maximising right-wingers and in the Eighties by Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher. They did their level best to deindustrialise by deregulating and by reducing subsidies to heavy industries. These measures accelerated the decline of traditional manufacturing. Corporations, of course, always looking to maximise their profits, were helped to maximise their profits by globalisation, so started relocating and outsourcing manufacturing to countries with a ready supply of cheap labour.

Reindustrialising our economies, as Rubio suggests, is a tall order indeed, unless, of course, our politicians want to get the workforce used to working in sweatshops! For that is the only way we’d be able to compete with the much lower production costs in Asia.

Marco Rubio’s speech is more important for what it doesn’t tell you than for what it did! To really understand his sometimes-sweet rhetoric, one must read between the lines. He talked of wanting a strong Europe. Poppycock! He and his boss don’t want a strong Europe at all; rather they want a weaker, more fragmented one. The concept of the European Union is anathema to Trump. After all, a weaker, more fragmented Europe gives Trump’s America far more leverage. It is much easier for Trump to push around a European nation state than it is to push around a strong, united European Union!

Basically, these autocracy-leaning fascists want Europe on their own terms. Ooh! And something else must also be read between the lines. There was no reference to it in Rubio’s speech, but I can assure you that it was there. They want to purge America and Europe of the influence of Islam.

If Trump and his acolytes are really so fond of Europe as Rubio tries to convince us, then why is he talking of invading the territory of a European nation: Denmark?

Judging by the applause Marco Rubio received at the end of his speech, it is clear that many in the audience were flattered by his fine words and were, as a result, seemingly taken in by them. Personally, I would caution against taking his words on face value. I suggest that one would be wiser to read between the lines.

After all, we are talking about a man, here, who was behind the invasion of Venezuela, and the man who is itching to bring about the collapse of communism in Cuba. Trump, his boss, has talked incessantly about the annexation of Greenland, if not indeed the invasion of the country. It is also on record that Trump has spoken multiple times of Europe being “weak” and “decaying”. He is also known to want the break-up of the European Union. So Rubio’s fine words buttered no parsnips for me, I’m afraid.

I would there therefore suggest that we Europeans exercise extreme caution in dealing with Trump’s America. In German, there is an apt saying. It is as follows: Vorsicht ist die Mutter der Weisheit.. That means ‘caution is the mother of wisdom’. And it most surely is. — © Mark Alexander

The Drugs That Fuelled Nazi’s Blitzkrieg I Pure WW2

Feb 12, 2026 | In 1938, a powerful stimulant called Pervitin was developed in Nazi Germany. Mass-distributed to German troops, the drug became a hidden fuel of the Wehrmacht’s early campaigns. Adolf Hitler himself was not spared: under the care of his personal physician, Theodor Morell, he received frequent injections and drug cocktails. Drawing on archives and testimonies, this film investigates how widespread drug use shaped soldiers’ endurance, decision-making, and leadership, and asks a disturbing question: to what extent were the course of the war and Hitler’s behavior chemically influenced?

Title: Blitzed: Nazis on Drugs
Director: Duncan Napier-Bell
Production: Forced march films limited, TCD (2018)