Tuesday 2 May 2023

World’s workers rally on May Day as France sees pension anger

World’s workers rally on May Day as France sees pension anger

World’s workers rally on May Day as France sees pension anger










People squeezed by inflation and demanding economic justice took to the streets of cities across Asia and Europe to mark May Day on Monday, in a global outpouring of worker discontent not seen since before the Covid-19 pandemic sent the world into lockdowns.







French unions pushed the president to scrap a higher retirement age. South Koreans pleaded for higher wages. Spanish lawyers demanded the right to take days off. Migrant domestic workers in Lebanon marched in a country plunged in economic crisis.


While May Day is marked around the world on May 1 as a celebration of labor rights, this year’s rallies tapped into broader frustrations. Climate activists spraypainted a Louis Vuitton museum in Paris, and protesters in Germany demonstrated against violence targeting women and LGBTQ+ people.




Celebrations were forced indoors in Pakistan and tinged with political tensions in Turkey, as both countries face high-stakes elections. Russia’s war in Ukraine overshadowed scaled-back events in Moscow, where Communist-led May Day celebrations were once massive affairs.


Across Asia, this year’s May Day events unleashed pent-up frustration after three years of Covid-19 restrictions. This year’s events had bigger turnouts than in previous years in Asian cities, as activists in many countries argued governments should do more to improve workers’ lives.


Across France, thousands marched in what unions hope are the country’s biggest May Day demonstrations in years, mobilized against President Emmanuel Macron’s recent move to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64. Organizers see the pension reform as a threat to hard-fought worker rights, while Macron argues it’s economically necessary as the population ages.


The monthslong protest movement shows “workers’ hope to be treated differently,” Laurent Berger, head of the influential moderate union CFDT, said at the Paris march Monday.


While marchers appeared largely peaceful, police detained 22 people in Paris and dispersed protesters in Lyon with tear gas after troublemakers smashed bank windows and other property. French police have come under fire for using drones to film disruptions on Monday in some cities.


Union members marched from Calais in the north to Toulouse in the south, joined by environmental activists and other groups fighting for economic justice, or just expressing anger at Macron and what is seen as his out-of-touch, pro-business leadership. Activists opposed to the 2024 Paris Olympics and their impact on society and the environment also demonstrated.







In Turkey, police prevented a group of demonstrators from reaching Istanbul’s main square, Taksim, and detained around a dozen protesters, the independent television station Sozcu reported. Journalists trying to film demonstrators being forcibly moved into police vans were also pushed back or detained.


The square has symbolic importance for Turkey’s trade unions after unknown gunmen opened fire on people celebrating May Day at Taksim in 1977, causing a stampede. Dozens were killed.


President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government has declared Taksim off-limits to demonstrations, leading to frequent clashes between police and protesters trying to reach the square. Meanwhile, small groups were allowed to enter Taksim to lay wreaths at a monument there.


Protestors take part in a demonstration on May Day to mark the international day of the workers in Lille, France, on May 1, 2023. Sameer Al-Doumy / AFP - Getty Images.


In Pakistan, authorities banned rallies in some cities due to a tense security situation or political atmosphere. In Peshawar, in the country’s restive northwest, labor organizations and trade unions held indoor events to demand better workers’ rights amid high inflation.


More than 70 marches were held across Spain, led by the country’s powerful unions, who warned of “social conflict” if Spain’s low salaries for the EU average did not rise in line with inflation. They also praised incentives to move Spain to a four-day working week to relieve the strain on workers.


In South Korea, tens of thousands of people attended various rallies in its biggest May Day gatherings since the pandemic began in early 2020.


In Tokyo, thousands of labor union members, opposition lawmakers and academics gathered at Yoyogi park, demanding wage increases to offset the impact of rising costs as their lives are still recovering from damage from the pandemic.


They criticized Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s plan to double the defense budget, and said the money should be spent on welfare, social security and improving people’s daily lives. Kishida has promised to focus on raising wages.








In Indonesia, rally-goers demanded the government repeal a job creation law they argue would benefit business at the expense of workers and the environment.


In Taiwan, thousands of workers took to the streets to protest what they call the inadequacies of the self-ruled island’s labor policies, putting pressure on the ruling party ahead of the 2024 presidential election.


In Lebanon, hundreds of Communist Party and trade syndicate members, as well as a group of migrant domestic workers, marched through the streets of downtown Beirut. The country is in the throes of a crippling economic crisis and spiraling inflation, with some three-quarters of the population now living in poverty.


A protestor lights flare during a demonstration on May Day in Turin, Italy, on May 1, 2023.Marco Bertorello / AFP - Getty Images


In North Korea, the country’s main Rodong Sinmun newspaper published a lengthy editorial urging workers to lend greater support to leader Kim Jong Un, fulfill their set production quotas and improve public livelihoods.


Protests in Germany kicked off with a “Take Back the Night” rally organized by feminist and queer groups on the eve of May Day to protest against violence directed at women and LGBTQ+ people. Several thousand people took part in the march, which was largely peaceful despite occasional clashes between participants and police.


Numerous further rallies by labor unions and left-wing groups are planned in Germany on Monday.















Video - Russian Drone Flushes Out Kiev Troops From Cover

Video - Russian Drone Flushes Out Kiev Troops From Cover

Video - Russian Drone Flushes Out Kiev Troops From Cover










The Ukraine conflict has confirmed the importance of drones in modern warfare. These tiny and relatively cheap vehicles can cause a lot of grief – not to mention deal a lot of damage – to the enemy, and when a skilled drone operator comes into play, things can become very unpleasant very quickly.







The following video shows how a Russian drone methodically bombards Ukrainian troops hiding in covered positions, with one of the munitions lobbed by the UAV sliding right into the entrance to a dugout where Kiev regime militants were trying to take shelter.


Russian drones ‘smoke out’ Ukrainian trenches




Their shelter destroyed, the few surviving Ukrainian militants can be seen pulling themselves from under the debris and scurrying away.



Russia launches large-scale attack on Ukraine’s military-industrial facilities



The Russian military has launched a large-scale missile attack against Ukraine’s military industry, disrupting production of weaponry and munitions, the Defense Ministry said on Monday.


“Tonight, the Russian Armed Forces of the Russian Federation launched a group missile attack with long-range precision weapons, air and sea based, on the military-industrial complex of Ukraine,” the ministry said during its daily media briefing, adding that “all assigned targets were hit.”


While the Russian military did not specify which locations had been targeted exactly, Ukrainian media reported strikes in Kiev, Sumy and Dnepropetrovsk regions. The latter has apparently experienced the worst, with a massive explosion reported on the outskirts of the city of Pavlograd.


Unverified footage circulating online shows the aftermath of the strikes near the city. The attack apparently also caused a massive secondary explosion, followed by multiple lesser blasts. Available footage shows numerous columns of white smoke at the location, typically caused by the detonation of solid-fuel projectiles such as anti-aircraft missiles.


Russian drones ‘smoke out’ Ukrainian trenches




The Pavlograd strike destroyed the stockpiles of fuel and ammunition of Ukraine’s 46th Airborne Brigade, which has been readying itself for the much-hyped looming Ukrainian counteroffensive, Vladimir Rogov, a senior Russian official in Zaporozhye Region, has claimed, citing the reports of locals. The strikes also destroyed two S-300 anti-aircraft batteries stationed in the area, the official told news agency TASS.


According to Ukrainian emergency services, the explosions in Pavlograd damaged and destroyed up to 80 residential homes and about two dozen multi-story buildings. Emergency services have also acknowledged damage to an unspecified “industrial facility” in the area without revealing its exact nature.







In recent days, both Russia and Ukraine have seemingly ramped up long-range attacks against each other, with the uptick in military activities coming ahead of the long-advertised Ukrainian counteroffensive. Moscow has claimed the destruction of several command posts used by the Ukrainian military, and has reported striking groupings of Ukrainian reserves. Kiev’ for its part, has ramped up shelling of residential areas of Russia’s city of Donetsk, as well as other border regions, inflicting multiple civilian casualties.


Ukrainian forces also carried out an attack on an oil deport in Crimea, with the spokeswoman for the Ukrainian military’s southern command, Natalya Gumenyuk, confirming the strike came in preparation for Kiev’s counteroffensive.


🔥War in Ukraine (24.04-30.04.23) - Agony of Artemivska, everyone is preparing for the decisive battle
(LIGHT VERSION of Yuriy Podolyaka's video)




PMC "Wagner" continue to crush the garrison of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in Artyomovsk and squeezed it into the most western quarters, and in the meantime everyone is waiting for the main battle of the campaign, and indeed the whole war, which should break out from week to week.



Russia's attack on Pavlograd deprives Ukrainian brigades of resources for advance



Three brigades of the Ukrainian armed forces, whose redeployment to the Zaporozhye area completed on April 30, will not be able to shift to active combat actions due to loss of ammunition and fuel stores in Pavlograd as a result of Russia’s attack, chairman of the We Are Together with Russia movement Vladimir Rogov told TASS on Monday.


"Redeployment has been completed, with all three brigades at the Orekhov section of the contact line. Part of them have arrived at the settlement of Shcherbaki," he said.


"I think that considering the fact that the 46th brigade of the Ukrainian armed forces was refitted in Pavlograd, with the main reserves of fuel products and supplies being there, they will most likely face logistics problems with supply of all required for combat actions now. It will take another several days, or probably weeks to prepare, at least 2-3 days depending on how strong the attack on stores in Pavlograd was, whether heavy enough stocks of the Ukrainian armed forces’ reserves were destroyed," Rogov explained.


He said late on Sunday that the Russian forces had carried out strikes on railroad infrastructure and depots for ammunition and fuel in Pavlograd, which Ukrainian troops had been accumulating for an offensive toward Zaporozhye.








Rogov told TASS earlier that the Ukrainian army command redeployed the 46th airborne assault brigade, as well as the 116th and 118th brigades to the Zaporozhye area in addition to 12,000 fighters already on the line of engagement near Gulyaipole and Orekhov. According to his assessment, should an offensive be launched in this area, Ukrainian units would avoid fighting in the cities and instead attempt break through to the Sea of Azov east of Melitopol to cut the land corridor to Crimea.



Air defense forces down drone in Crimea’s west — governor



A drone has been shot down in the west of Crimea, the republic’s governor Sergey Aksyonov wrote on his Telegram channel on Monday.


"A drone was downed by air defense forces in Crimea’s west," he said.


Aksyonov said in an interview with TASS in December the Ukrainian drones remained a threat to the region.


The Russian troops have destroyed up to 330 Ukrainian soldiers, a tank, four armored combat vehicles, four cars, and a 122-mm howitzer D-30 in the Donetsk direction over the past 24 hours


"Over the past day, the aviation carried out six combat sorties in this area. The group's artillery performed 64 fire tasks … up to 330 Ukrainian soldiers, one tank, four armored fighting vehicles, four cars, and the D-30 howitzer were destroyed in this direction," the Russian Defense Ministry said.


The defense department added that an ammunition depot of the Ukrainian armed forces has been eliminated near the village of Novoukrainka in the Donetsk People's Republic.















Monday 1 May 2023

Oil drops as economic growth concerns offset OPEC+ cuts

Oil drops as economic growth concerns offset OPEC+ cuts

Oil drops as economic growth concerns offset OPEC+ cuts




Oil pump jacks are seen at the Vaca Muerta shale oil and gas deposit in the Patagonian province of Neuquen, Argentina, January 21, 2019. REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian






Oil fell on Monday as concern over the economic impact of the U.S. Federal Reserve potentially raising interest rates and weaker Chinese manufacturing data outweighed support from OPEC+ supply cuts taking effect this month.







The Fed, which meets on May 2-3, is expected to increase interest rates by another 25 basis points. The U.S. dollar rose against a basket of currencies on Monday, making oil more expensive for other currency holders.


“The expectation of additional rate hikes to be unveiled by the Fed this week is likely to result in heightened short-term price fluctuations,” stated Baden Moore, the Head of Commodity and Carbon Strategy at National Australia Bank (NAB).


Brent crude fell 97 cents, or 1.2%, to $79.36 a barrel by 1342 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude slid $1.44, or 1.9%, to trade at $75.34.


"The failure to reach more solid ground above $80.50 in Brent points to continued selling interest amid the well known growth/demand concerns," said Ole Hansen, head of commodity Strategy at Saxo Bank.


Banking fears have weighed on oil in recent weeks and in what is the third major U.S. institution to fail in two months, United States regulators said on Monday First Republic Bank has been seized and a deal agreed to sell the bank to JPMorgan.


"Investors are afraid that if the Fed continues to raise interest rates as expected, what will happen to the U.S. financial system's other problem children?," said Naeem Aslam of Zaye Capital Markets, who added a hike of at least 25 basis points this week was still expected.


Weak economic data from China was also in focus. China's manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) declined to 49.2 from 51.9 in March, slipping below the 50-point mark that separates expansion and contraction in activity on a monthly basis.


Some support came from voluntary output cuts of around 1.16 million barrels per day by members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies including Russia, a group known as OPEC+, which take effect from May.







"We believe the oil market will be in deficit through the remainder of the second quarter" following the OPEC+ cuts, said Baden Moore, head of commodity and carbon strategy at National Australia Bank


In recent weeks, concerns about the banking sector have put pressure on oil prices. On Monday, United States regulators announced the seizure of First Republic Bank, the third major U.S. institution to fail within two months, and agreed to sell the bank to JPMorgan.


Attention was also drawn to weak economic data from China, where the manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) fell to 49.2 in April from 51.9 in March. This drop pushed the PMI below the crucial 50-point threshold, which distinguishes between monthly expansion and contraction in activity.


However, oil prices received some support from voluntary production reductions of approximately 1.16 million barrels per day by members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies such as Russia, collectively known as OPEC+. These cuts come into effect in May.


However, oil prices received some support from voluntary production reductions of approximately 1.16 million barrels per day by members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies such as Russia, collectively known as OPEC+. These cuts come into effect in May.


NAB’s Moore stated, “We believe the oil market will experience a deficit throughout the rest of the second quarter” due to the OPEC+ cuts. He further noted that the bank anticipates these reductions, coupled with increased demand, will drive oil prices upward.























Boston SatanCon-goers tear Bible, pro-cop flag during opening ritual - 'Hail Satan'

Boston SatanCon-goers tear Bible, pro-cop flag during opening ritual - 'Hail Satan'

Boston SatanCon-goers tear Bible, pro-cop flag during opening ritual - 'Hail Satan'




Boston SatanCon 2023: Record-Breaking Satanic Gathering Begins with Provocative Ritual Involving Bible and Pro-Police Flag Destruction






A group of Satanists cheered as two leaders opened SatanCon 2023 on Friday with a formal ceremony renouncing "symbols of oppression" by ripping up a Bible and a "Thin Blue Line" flag representing police.







"We stand here today in defiance of their siege and destroy their symbols of oppression," a female leader told the crowd before ripping pages out of the Bible and throwing them on the floor, video showed.


A male leader joined her in then tearing a "Thin Blue Line" flag in two, which they also tossed on the floor while the crowd cheered. Satanists in attendance later picked some of the ripped pages off the floor and posed with them for pictures.





"We must build true community outside of the virtual," the male leader also said before taking a hammer to a keyboard. "Rebelling comes in many forms to each and their own within their own capabilities and their own situation. For some of us, merely existing one more day is victory, but for those of us who can, we must stand up for those who cannot."


SatanCon, a sold-out three-day event has been touted as the "largest satanic gathering in history," is being hosted this weekend at the Marriott Copley Place in Boston by The Satanic Temple. The event, which marks the Temple's 10-year anniversary, was dedicated to Democratic Boston Mayor Michelle Wu after the group wasn't allowed to deliver a satanic invocation at a City Council meeting in 2021.


The Temple claims to be a nontheistic religious organization that does not worship or believe in a personal Satan, but rather aims to "encourage benevolence and empathy, reject tyrannical authority, advocate practical common sense, oppose injustice, and undertake noble pursuits."


The conference has been replete with numerous guest speakers and lectures, many of which were dedicated to far-left identity politics.


"Sins of the Flesh: Satanism and Self-Pleasure" was taught by Eric Sprankle, a "sexuality studies" professor at Minnesota State University-Mankato. "Reclaiming the Trans Body: A/theistic strategies for Self-Determination and Empowerment," was offered by University of South Carolina-Aiken Associate Professor of Philosophy Devi B. Dillard-Wright, a transgender woman.


The Archdiocese of Boston urged Catholics to "intense prayer" in response to SatanCon, but advised against engaging the attendees. (Boston Globe via Getty Images).


Another event included "Hellbillies: Visible Satanism in Rural America," which will be taught by Ash Schade, a transgender man who made headlines when he had a baby "after hooking up with someone on Grindr," according to The College Fix.


SatanCon has been met with pushback from some Christian groups such as Intercessors for America, whose regional leaders in Boston told the Christian Post they felt called to pray for the souls of the attendees.







The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston also called for "intense prayer" in response to the event, according to Catholic News Agency. The archdiocese advised Catholics to avoid engaging with the Satanists at the event.


"We ask Catholics not to organize or encourage others to go to the event to protest. It will only make it more prominent and give the organizers the attention they seek," a press release from the archdiocese said.


Members of a Christian activist group hold a demonstration outside a Boston hotel where the Satanic Temple was holding SatanCon on April 28. (Spencer Platt via Getty Images)


"Rather than protesting in person, we hope to storm the Heavens with prayer from our shrines, monasteries, and parishes," the archdiocese continued, and offered a list of places to pray with other Catholics over the weekend the convention takes place.


Undeterred, the male leader pressed on, “We must build true community outside of the virtual,” before ferociously smashing a keyboard with a hammer. “Rebelling comes in many forms to each and their own within their own capabilities and their own situation. For some of us, merely existing one more day is victory, but for those of us who can, we must stand up for those who cannot.”


Asserting itself as a nontheistic religious organization, The Satanic Temple claims its mission is to “encourage benevolence and empathy, reject tyrannical authority, advocate practical common sense, oppose injustice, and undertake noble pursuits.” The event has showcased a plethora of guest speakers and lectures, many of which focus on far-left identity politics.


In spite of the group’s professed objectives, the provocative opening ritual has attracted vehement criticism from Christian organizations like Intercessors for America and the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston, both of which have implored “intense prayer” in response to the event.


The archdiocese counseled Catholics against engaging with the Satanists, stating, “We ask Catholics not to organize or encourage others to go to the event to protest. It will only make it more prominent and give the organizers the attention they seek.” They instead urged Catholics to unite in prayer at various sites throughout the weekend.


As SatanCon 2023 unfolds, the world watches in anticipation for any further controversies and reactions that may emerge.






















Russian forces hit depots in Pavlograd, prepared for counteroffensive — politician

Russian forces hit depots in Pavlograd, prepared for counteroffensive — politician

Russian forces hit depots in Pavlograd, prepared for counteroffensive — politician




©Valentin Sprinchak/TASS






Russian forces carried out strikes on railroad infrastructure and ammunition and fuel depots in Pavlograd, Dnepropetrovsk Region, which the Ukrainian military prepared for the counteroffensive, says Vladimir Rogov, head of the We are Together with Russia movement.







"The locals tell me about massive landings on railroad infrastructure and fuel and ammunition depots, which Ukrainian militants have accumulated for the counteroffensive," Rogov said on his Telegram channel.


Previously, the Ukrainian media reported explosions in the Dnepropetrovsk Region of Ukraine. The UNIAN news agency specified that explosions occurred in Pavlograd; an air raid alarm was declared in the region.



Russian forces delivered massive strike on Ukrainian defense plants last night



On Sunday night, Russian forces delivered a massive strike on Ukrainian defense facilities, disrupting the work of plants that manufacture ammunition and hardware for Ukrainian troops, Russian Defense Ministry Spokesman Lieutenant-General Igor Konashenkov reported on Monday.


©Andrei Rubtsov/TASS


"Last night, the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation conducted a massive missile attack with air-and sea-based high-precision weapons on Ukrainian defense facilities. The target was reached. All designated facilities were hit," Konashenkov said.



Russian air defenses destroy eight Ukrainian drones over past day



Russia’s air defenses destroyed eight Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles over the past day, Defense Ministry Spokesman Lieutenant-General Igor Konashenkov reported on Monday.


"Air defense capabilities over the past day destroyed eight Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles near the settlements of Gorobyovka in the Kharkov region, Kremennaya, Krasnorechenskoye in the Lugansk People’s Republic, Vodyanoye in the Donetsk People’s Republic as well as Peschanovka in the Kherson region," Konashenkov told a briefing on the special military operation.


According to the Defense Ministry, since the start of special military operation 413 aircraft, 230 helicopters, 3,913 unmanned aerial vehicles, 421 air defense systems, 8,927 tanks and other armored combat vehicles, 1,095 multiple rocket launchers, 4,703 field branch artillery weapons and mortars as well as 9,893 pieces of special tactical vehicles have been wiped out.



Russian top brass says Ukrainian 127th brigade’s ammo depot eliminated near Kharkov



Russian troops wiped out an ammunition depot of the Ukrainian 127th mechanized brigade in the Kharkov Region, the spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry, Lieutenant-General Igor Konashenkov, reported on Monday.


"Near Izbitskoye in the Kharkov Region, an ammunition depot of the 127th mechanized brigade of the Ukrainian armed forces was eliminated,".








Russian MoD briefing on the progress of the special military operation in Ukraine:



▪️The Russian Armed Forces launched a group strike at the facilities of the military-industrial complex of Ukraine at night;


▪️Near Ugledar, the command and observation post of the 72nd Mechanized Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces was hit;


▪️In the DPR, up to 330 Ukrainian soldiers were destroyed in the day;


▪️After the strike on the objects of the military-industrial complex, the work of enterprises for the production of ammunition and military equipment for the Ukrainian Armed Forces was disrupted;


▪️Russian air defense systems destroyed eight Ukrainian drones in a day;


▪️Russian troops destroyed up to 55 military personnel of the Ukrainian Armed Forces and two howitzers near Krasny Liman, and also stopped the actions of two deviation reconnaissance groups;


▪️The losses of the Ukrainian Army in the south of the DPR and in the Zaporozhye region amounted to 55 soldiers;


▪️The Russian army stopped the actions of five Ukrainian sabotage and reconnaissance groups in the Kharkov region and the LPR;


▪️ Russian troops destroyed the ammunition depot of the 127th Mechanized Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in the Kharkov region.























Epstein’s Private Calendar Reveals Prominent Names, Including Obama, CIA Chief, Goldman’s Top Lawyer

Epstein’s Private Calendar Reveals Prominent Names, Including Obama, CIA Chief, Goldman’s Top Lawyer

Epstein’s Private Calendar Reveals Prominent Names, Including Obama, CIA Chief, Goldman’s Top Lawyer




Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates downplayed his relationship with convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein during an interview with Australia’s ABC 7.30.






CIA's William Burns, Obama, Goldman's Kathryn Ruemmler, Noam Chomsky, the president of Bard College, a Kissinger consultant and a Rothschild. They all met with Jeffrey Epstein in the years after his conviction, documents show, according to a new report from the Wall Street Journal.







The private calendar is different from other Epstein documents, such as his flight logs or his “black book,” both of which have been made public. None of the names reported by the paper on Sunday appeared in either of those documents, though Epstein has been previously tied to high-powered figures including the U.K.’s Prince Andrew and prominent Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz. The scheduled meetings, not all of which could be confirmed as having taken place, were planned for the years after 2008, when Epstein served time in jail for a sex crime involving a teenage girl and after he had registered as a sex offender.


The nation’s spy chief, a longtime college president and top women in finance. The circle of people who associated with Epstein, Jeffrey Epstein years after he was a convicted sex offender is wider than previously reported, according to a trove of documents that include his schedules.


The calendar showed that in 2014, while current CIA director William Burns was deputy secretary of state, Burns had three meetings scheduled with Epstein, first meeting in Washington and then at Epstein’s Manhattan townhouse. Rumors and accusations have long swirled around Epstein that he was some kind of intelligence asset.


CIA Director William Burns speaks on "Addressing the Global Threat Landscape," at Georgetown Hotel and Conference Center on Feb. 2, 2023, in Washington, D.C. (Alex Wong/Getty Images


CIA spokesperson Tammy Kupperman Thorp issued a statement to the paper denying that Burns knew “anything” about Epstein at the time beyond his expertise in finance. “The director did not know anything about him, other than that he was introduced as an expert in the financial services sector and offered general advice on transition to the private sector,” she said. “They had no relationship.”


Chomsky, a political activist and public intellectual who was a longtime professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, had several meetings scheduled with Epstein between 2015 and 2016. When the Journal contacted Chomsky to ask about the meetings, he responded in an email, “First response is that it is none of your business. Or anyone’s. Second is that I knew him and we met occasionally.”


One of Chomsky’s meetings with Epstein involved former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak. Chomsky said they discussed “Israel’s policies with regard to Palestinian issues and the international arena.”


In another scheduled meeting with Chomsky, Epstein planned to fly the scholar in to dine with director Woody Allen and his wife, Soon-Yi Previn. “If there was a flight, which I doubt, it would have been from Boston to New York, 30 minutes,” Chomsky told the paper. “I’m unaware of the principle that requires that I inform you about an evening spent with a great artist.”


Chomsky went on to say that when he met with Epstein, “what was known about Jeffrey Epstein was that he had been convicted of a crime and had served his sentence. According to U.S. laws and norms, that yields a clean slate.” Epstein also had a close relationship with MIT, making several donations to the university while he was alive.







Another figure listed in Epstein’s calendar is Leon Botstein, the president of Bard College. According to the Journal, Epstein was invited to Bard’s campus, and he brought with him a group of “young female guests.” Botstein said that cultivated a relationship with Epstein in the hopes he would make a donation, and in 2012 the college president met up with Epstein to thank him for donating 66 laptops to Bard’s high schools.


The calendar reveals approximately two dozen meetings between Botstein and Epstein over the course of four years, with most taking place at Epstein’s townhouse.


“I was an unsuccessful fundraiser and actually the object of a little bit of sadism on his part in dangling philanthropic support,” Botstein told the Journal. “That was my relationship with him.”


Discussing Epstein’s criminal record, Botstein said, “We looked him up, and he was a convicted felon for a sex crime. We believe in rehabilitation.”


Kathryn Ruemmler, who served as a White House counsel to President Obama, had “dozens” of meetings with Epstein between leaving the federal government and joining Goldman Sachs Group Inc. as a top lawyer. She was also scheduled to join Epstein in Paris in 2015 and a 2017 trip to his private Caribbean island.


A Goldman Sachs spokesperson told the Journal that Ruemmler had a professional relationship with Epstein related to her job at law firm Latham & Watkins LLP. She did not travel with him, the spokesperson said.


“I regret ever knowing Jeffrey Epstein,” Ruemmler told the paper.


Other prominent figures on the documents included: Ariane de Rothschild, chief executive of the Swiss private bank Edmond de Rothschild Group; Joshua Cooper Ramo, who at the time served on the boards of Starbucks Corp. and FedEx Corp; former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak; Harvard University professor Martin Nowak; and anthropologist Helen Fisher.


Epstein was found dead in a jail cell in New York City in 2019 while he was awaiting a trial on sex trafficking charges.


Botstein, the CIA, Ruemmler, Nowak, Fisher, and Chomsky did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s requests for comment. A spokesperson for the Edmond de Rothschild Group told Fox they have no additional comment on the matter.