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Pet Life
Pet Life
1 y

Burdock Root for Dogs: Vet Reviewed Uses, Potential Benefits & Side Effects
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Burdock Root for Dogs: Vet Reviewed Uses, Potential Benefits & Side Effects

Click to Skip Ahead What Is Burdock Root? How Is Burdock Root Given? Missing a Dose Potential Side Effects  Frequently Asked Questions Before the development of pharmaceutical laboratories, traditional medicine started by using many plants and herbs to help the body heal and naturally treat skin conditions and other ailments. And in fact, we still use herbs and plants for their medicinal properties. One of the plants better known for their medicinal applications is the burdock plant (Arctium lappa), particularly the burdock root. In fact, burdock root was valued in traditional Chinese medicine due to its ability to“detoxify” blood and promote circulation. It has also been used topically to treat conditions such as eczema. In this guide, we’ll learn more about the burdock root, what it is it what are the claims and what has been studied and what are potential medicinal applications in dogs. The information in this post is merely informational and it is in no way intended as a prescription or recommendation. At Dogster, we do not recommend offering any supplement or medication to your dog without your veterinarian’s prescription. What Is Burdock Root? Image Credit: Tricky_Shark, Shutterstock Burdock, also referred to as Greater Burdock (Arctium lappa), is a plant belonging to Asteraceae family just like the aster, daisy, and sunflower. This plant is native to Europe and Northern Asia and while it has been used for centuries in traditional medicine, there is very little research out there about its use in canines. Anecdotal reports say the root is successfully used topically in dogs to help with skin issues such as swollen and red skin due to allergies the medical term for this condition is canine atopic dermatitis or canine eczema. And while there are no in vivo studies to prove this,  concluded that Burdock root extract stimulates chondroitin sulfate biosynthesis, and modulates pathways that regulate cellular functions which are particularly important for the wound healing process. These properties might be linked to the anecdotal success of the use of burdock root as a treatment to reduce pain and inflammation caused by arthritis in dogs. Burdock root is one of the ingredients listed on some of the immune support dog supplements sold online. The antioxidant compounds found in the root would be behind this claim, however like with many of the herbal medicines, the reality is that we lack sufficient studies to firmly support its effects. This thistle-like plant is hardy and easy to grow in your garden in rich soil. How you store the root will depend on how it is prepared, which we’ll discuss further in the next section. How Is Burdock Root Given? Image Credit: ALPA PROD, Shutterstock Typically, the most common way to give your dog burdock root is given to a dog is in the form of commercially available supplements that consist of a combination of this root plant and other herbal medicines. Several of the herbal blend products containing Burdock root are liquid tinctures that can be mixed with your dog’s food. The root doesn’t taste very pleasant, so a disguise will be beneficial in getting it into your dog’s system, but the liquids can be squirted into your dog’s mouth if they tolerate it. You can also find burdock root extract in a chewable tablet or powder form. Each commercially available herbal blend containing Burdock is marked for different purposes including detoxification, allergy relief, immune supplement,  joint care, and even urinary tract support. Before choosing any of these herbal supplements, it’s essential to consult your veterinarian. We do not recommend taking it upon yourself to decide whether or not any of these commercially available supplements will help your dog. Holistic veterinarians occasionally recommend herbal medicine, they have the necessary knowledge and experience to decide if your dog will have any benefit from this herb. The vet will give you the most appropriate preparation and recommend how much and how often to give the root to your dog, as the dose will vary depending on your dog’s weight, size, and the ailment(s) you’re treating. We advise you never to give your dog the root unless you get the go-ahead from your veterinarian for safety. What Happens if You Miss a Dose? Since burdock root is a natural herbal remedy for particular ailments, dose frequency is not as detrimental as other allopathic medications. If you miss a dose, it’s safe to wait until your dog’s next meal or even wait until the next day to give the dose. But again, burdock root should only be offered if your vet approves it and per their instructions. Potential Side Effects of Burdock Root While side effects from burdock root in canines are rare, you should still familiarize yourself with possible side effects for your dog’s safety. It’s important to monitor your dog while giving burdock root and to consult your vet if you notice any of these rare but possible signs due to adverse reactions: Nausea Vomiting Diarrhea “Burr tongue” or granular stomatitis Image Credit: Iryna Imago, Shutterstock Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) What Other Benefits Does Burdock Root Offer Dogs? Not only does burdock root provide a natural remedy for certain ailments and conditions, but it also has vitamins and minerals that benefit humans that might also be beneficial to your dog’s health, such as vitamins C, E, B5, B6, B9, potassium, phosphorus, magnesium, iron, potassium, zinc, copper, and more. Another interesting fact about Burdock root is that it contains inulin, a probiotic fiber that might benefit a dog’s gut microbiome. Burdock root has also been proposed as a flavor enhancer in doga and cat food, however,  the European Commission, the EFSA Panel on Additives and Products or Substances used in Animal Feed (FEEDAP) Image Credit: Yossi James, Shutterstock What Health Conditions in Dogs Is Burdock Root Not Advisable For? It’s important to note that burdock root may affect blood sugar levels, making it potentially dangerous, especially for dogs with diabetes. Pregnant or nursing dogs should also not use burdock root. Where Can I Buy Burdock Root for My Dog? After determining if this is the correct treatment for your dog or if they will have any health benefit from it, holistic veterinarians will usually prepare a tincture or might even provide you with the dry root to offer to your pup in the form of an infusion or mixed with their food.  They might also recommend a commercially available product. There are many online stores where you can buy burdock root for your dog. It’s available in liquid tinctures, chewable tablets, and powder form, usually with a combination of other herbs. Please remember that herbal medicine while natural can have dangerous and detrimental effects on your dog’s health if not properly used. We recommend that you do not buy it before consulting it with your veterinarian first to ensure it’s safe for your particular canine. Conclusion Burdock root has been used for different medicinal properties in traditional medicine. In canines, this root has been used as a natural remedy for many ailments, such as arthritis, UTIs, digestion, skin issues, and immune and liver support, among others. The root has also been proposed but not officially accepted as a flavor additive in dog feed, due to the lack of evidence on its safety and efficacy. This root is most commonly found as an ingredient in pet supplements containing multi-herbal blends. However, despite the many potential benefits the root has to offer, we advise you to consult your vet before giving any to your dog. Sources https://www.petmd.com/dog/wellness/evr_multi_herb_n_living https://www.vetinfo.com/herbal-dog-allergy-treatments.html https://www.vetinfo.com/are-there-natural-remedies-for-uti-in-dogs.html https://www.vetinfo.com/alternative-cancer-treatment-for-dogs.html https://www.vetinfo.com/natural-liver-cleanse-for-dogs.html https://www.vetinfo.com/bathing-tips-for-itchy-dog-skin-treatment.html https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34061396/ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20981575/ https://www.caninenutritionist.co.uk/natural-herbs-for-dogs/burdock-root-for-dogs/ https://www.healthline.com/health/burdock-root https://health.clevelandclinic.org/burdock-root https://www.mountsinai.org/health-library/herb/burdock#:~:text=Burdock%20is%20native%20to%20Europe,to%20clothing%20or%20animal%20fur. https://www.webmd.com/vitamins/ai/ingredientmono-111/burdock https://www.natural-dog-health-remedies.com/burdock.html https://blog.vetnaturals.com/the-veterinarians-guide-to-dog-supplements-know-what-youre-giving-your-pet/ https://fdc.nal.usda.gov/fdc-app.html#/food-details/169974/nutrients https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0963996920309145 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1696073/pdf/canvetj00425-0046.pdf https://www.caninenutritionist.co.uk/natural-herbs-for-dogs/burdock-root-for-dogs/ https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0165242713002778 https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10787-010-0062-4?correlationId=b121bc8c-633b-48c3-a8cf-45d75618283a https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0165242713002778 https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8059735/ https://prf.hn/click/camref:1101l8LeP/pubref:pangovet/destination:https://www.chewy.com/animal-essentials-detox-blend-liver/dp/125400   Featured Image Credit: John_T, Shutterstock The post Burdock Root for Dogs: Vet Reviewed Uses, Potential Benefits & Side Effects appeared first on PangoVet.
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The best Black Friday deals we’ve found (so far)
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The best Black Friday deals we’ve found (so far)

Image: Elen Winata for The Verge From OLED TVs and iPads to streaming services and games, here’s the very best of what Black Friday has to offer. Continue reading…
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Amazing Map Shows That All 50 States Moved to the Right in the 2024 Election
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Amazing Map Shows That All 50 States Moved to the Right in the 2024 Election

In the 2024 election, every single state in the country moved to the right with Republicans gaining votes even in blue states like Massachusetts, New York, and New Jersey. Take a look below and you’ll…
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Desrosiers Scores 3 TDs as Memphis Tops No. 18 Tulane 34–24 to End the Green Wave’s Faint CFP Hopes
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Desrosiers Scores 3 TDs as Memphis Tops No. 18 Tulane 34–24 to End the Green Wave’s Faint CFP Hopes

NEW ORLEANS—Greg Desrosiers Jr. caught two scoring passes and ran for a touchdown, and Memphis defeated No. 18 Tulane 34–24 on Thursday night to end the Green Wave’s long-shot bid for a berth in…
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Teen Dies After Being Hit by Stray Bullet During Ride Home From Hockey Game in St. Louis
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Teen Dies After Being Hit by Stray Bullet During Ride Home From Hockey Game in St. Louis

ST. LOUIS—A 16-year-old has died after being hit by a stray bullet last weekend on a St. Louis highway.Colin Brown was hit Saturday night while being driven home in his father’s car after playing…
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Islam’s Borrowed Paradise
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Islam’s Borrowed Paradise

[Want even more content from FPM? Sign up for FPM+ to unlock exclusive series, virtual town-halls with our authors, and more—now for just $3.99/month. Click here to sign up.] The Qur’an’s…
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Restoration Weekend’s All-Star Panel: ‘What Just Happened?’
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Restoration Weekend’s All-Star Panel: ‘What Just Happened?’

How and why Donald Trump won this election.November 29, 2024 by Frontpage Editors Leave a Comment [Want even more content from FPM? Sign up for FPM+ to unlock exclusive series, virtual town-halls…
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Largest Illegal Alien County Prepares ‘Resistance’ to Trump
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Largest Illegal Alien County Prepares ‘Resistance’ to Trump

[Want even more content from FPM? Sign up for FPM+ to unlock exclusive series, virtual town-halls with our authors, and more—now for just $3.99/month. Click here to sign up.] Eight percent…
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Conservative Voices
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Russia’s Redlines
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Russia’s Redlines

Foreign Affairs Russia’s Redlines The U.S. is playing with fire in Ukraine. Last week’s decision by Russian president Vladimir Putin to launch an intermediate-range ballistic missile against a military complex located in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro (population 937,000) was a response to a prior Ukrainian attack on Russian territory that made use of American-made ATACM and British-made Storm Shadow ballistic missiles. This is but the latest in a series of alarming escalatory moves from both sides of the conflict. Worryingly, the same people who assured us Russia would acquiesce to NATO’s enlargement to its borders are now assuring us that Putin’s repeated threats to resort to nuclear weapons are nothing to worry about. In a televised speech on November 21, Putin warned that, “We consider ourselves entitled to use our weapons against military facilities of those countries that allow their weapons to be used against our facilities.” Dr. Stephen Starr, who served as the Director of the Clinical Laboratory Science Program at the University of Missouri points out, The U.S. ATACM and UK Storm Shadow missile attacks directed and conducted against Russian territory, have had no prospect of changing the outcome of the Ukraine War. Russia has already won. The U.S., NATO, and their proxy Ukraine have been decisively defeated on the battlefield by a Russian military armed with a host of weapons far superior to anything possessed by the West—all at the terrible expense of the people of Ukraine, who have lost well over a million killed and wounded, with their nation utterly destroyed. All this comes fast on the heels of Russia’s announcement, also made last week, that Russia has amended its nuclear doctrine by lowering its threshold for a nuclear strike. Going forward, Moscow will consider an attack by a non-nuclear country that is supported by nuclear-armed powers as a joint attack.  These pronouncements were greeted with dismay by a gathering of international relations scholars and security experts at the inaugural meeting of the Yerevan Dialogue over the weekend. Founded by the Armenian-American political scientist Arthur Khachikian, the Dialogue hosted a dozen  international affairs and regional security experts from Europe and the United States over the weekend in Armenia. One retired French military official, who asked not to be identified, emphatically noted that, for Putin, “there is a ‘red line’ but we will only discover it once it is too late.” The official’s statement was an eerie echo of Hegel’s warning that “the Owl of Minerva spreads its wings only with the coming of the dusk”—in other words, wisdom begins to dawn only when it’s too late. It hardly needs pointing out that wisdom has not been among the defining characteristics of the Biden administration, the titular head of which spent the previous three decades loudly claiming that it was inconceivable that NATO expansion would provoke a Russian response. Better minds and men knew differently. The Cold War historian Hall Gardner of the American University of Paris noted over the weekend that in 1995, Paul Nitze, a Cold Warrior par excellence and Ronald Reagan’s principal arms-control negotiator, submitted an op-ed to the Washington Post in which he warned of the potentially destabilizing effects of NATO expansion.  Nitze’s op-ed, unearthed by Gardner, read, in part: With the vulnerability of Russia’s new democracy, pushing for NATO enlargement will likely exacerbate the existing, destructive internal pressures. A wrong move on our part could easily backfire, triggering the rise to power by Russia’s nationalists, sidetracking START II and possibly unraveling other arms control agreements without which NATO will find itself back in a Cold War environment. It is far better to act on the belief that Russian nationalists are growing in political power and be wrong by curtailing NATO expansion, than it is to risk European instability in the face of a new confrontation with Moscow… Our long term objective should be to promote the engagement not the exclusion of Russia in Europe. But the Post declined to run it. Moving from clear and present to future dangers, security experts I spoke to also expressed grave misgivings about the decision to deploy U.S. long-range Tomahawk cruise missiles to Germany beginning in 2026. The first Trump administration’s evisceration of the landmark 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (which Nitze helped negotiate) made the deployment possible—after all, the Treaty had heretofore prohibited the deployment of missiles with ranges of between 500 and 5,500 kilometers. The upshot of all this is easy enough to discern. The war’s continuation will result in: the further devastation of Ukraine, a hardening of the cold war divide across Europe, and a deepening of the “no limits” partnership between Russia and China. This last will have ramifications for the incoming administration’s expected hardline policy toward Iran. In this context, it is important to note the statement of the Arab Islamic Summit issued on November 11 which warned of the “danger of the escalation sweeping the region and its regional and international consequences.”  In their enthusiasm for a violent confrontation with Russia, a generation of American pundits and policymakers have helped create the conditions for a wider war, one that may soon stretch across Ukraine into the Greater Middle East. It remains a very open question (given the shape of his national security team) how Donald Trump plans to weather the coming storm. The post Russia’s Redlines appeared first on The American Conservative.
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1 y

DOGE’s Best First Target: the National Endowment for Democracy
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DOGE’s Best First Target: the National Endowment for Democracy

Politics DOGE’s Best First Target: the National Endowment for Democracy Why should the government be funding a CIA cut-out to meddle in politics abroad and at home? (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDSALAIN JOCARD/AFP via Getty Images) The new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) should seriously consider the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) for its high priority list of federal cost cutting measures in 2025. It’s not only a sinkhole of American taxpayer dollars—over $1 billion in congressional appropriations from 2020, 2021, 2022 to 2023—but NED’s mission to “promote freedom around the world” has over the decades translated into countless cases of counterproductive meddling that puts truly organic “people-powered” movements at risk by fomenting regime change and revolution for Washington’s political aims and purposes. “If [Elon] Musk and [Vivek] Ramaswamy are really serious about this idea of taking a hatchet to government spending, they should do so by starting with the programs that are most detrimental to the world and U.S. interests and are least likely to hurt ordinary Americans when cut,” said Jacobin’s Branko Marcetic, who wrote about NED when the first Trump administration slashed the organization’s budget. The Washington establishment greeted that move with the ritual gnashing of teeth and rending of clothes over the “assault” on democracy. “On balance,” Marcetic told The American Conservative, “the NED has been a detrimental force that would not be missed if it disappeared tomorrow.” The quasi-government agency—“quasi” meaning that it is technically an independent non-profit but it gets the greater part of its funding by far from annual government grants—was first instituted in 1983 to make overt the covert programs of the CIA in foreign countries. This isn’t some anti-imperialist smear, as NED has tried to suggest. Records from the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library archives show it was the brainchild of then-CIA Director William Casey and William Raymond Jr., who worked for the CIA’s propaganda office before moving to the National Security Council. Allen Weinstein, former president of NED, told Washington Post columnist David Ignatius in 1991, “A lot of what we do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA. The biggest difference is that when such activities are done overtly, the flap potential is close to zero. Openness is its own protection.” The true “protection” is twofold. Operating in a heavily layered ecosystem where it is seeding organizations here and in other countries, NED operates under the radar; most American taxpayers have no idea that more than $362 million of its taxpayer dollars went to NED in 2023 or anything that the organization really does. Its own website is immensely vague and no longer provides a database for its grants. But researchers have catalogued or archived some of it, and it is available here, and here.  Second, its mission statement sounds anodyne enough: “[NED] is dedicated to the growth and strengthening of democratic institutions around the world.” Often you will hear that NED helped to nurture the Solidarity movement in Poland and the anti-Apartheid movement in South Africa. It helps to empower women-led enterprises in traditionally patriarchal societies in Africa, rainforest protection in Brazil, and monitor human rights violations and extra-judicial killings in war-ravaged places like Ethiopia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. But mounting evidence over the last 40 years has suggested that NED funding has been also used to promote preferred U.S. policies in politically and/or militarily fragile states where the U.S. has a clear strategic interest in seeing tensions boil over into a power shift. “This is particularly controversial in countries where the U.S. has strategic interests, as the NED’s support for opposition movements is often an attempt to interfere in the internal affairs of sovereign nations, exacerbating internal conflicts and undermining the sovereignty of these nations—see Venezuela, Russia, and Cuba,” the retired State Department official (and TAC contributing editor) Peter Van Buren told TAC.  Back in 2002, reflecting bipartisan U.S. desires back in Washington, NED funded a whopping $877,000 to help oust the left-wing Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez through various schemes, culminating in a failed coup. The funding and fomenting continued to at least 2010, according to this report. Chavez went on to win his third election before dying in 2013, when the torch was then passed to Nicolas Maduro. The money has continued to flow through the rest of the decade as U.S. and other Western governments lobbied for opposition leader Juan Guaido (another failure). As democracy movements pushed, the U.S. continued to promote crushing sanctions on the country; these have only hurt Venezuela’s already impoverished people, not the apparently ever-secure Maduro, who, by hook or crook, just won his latest election in a (disputed) landslide. Similar narratives have played out in Nicaragua, where NED money went to pro-Contra opponents of the leftwing Sandinista government in the 1980s, and Haiti (via the International Republican Institute, which is accused of helping to overthrow President Bertrand Aristide in 2004). In 2003, then-Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) blasted the existence of NED: The NED injects “soft money” into the domestic elections of foreign countries in favor of one party or the other. Imagine what a couple of hundred thousand dollars will do to assist a politician or political party in a relatively poor country abroad. It is particularly Orwellian to call U.S. manipulation of foreign elections “promoting democracy.” How would Americans feel if the Chinese arrived with millions of dollars to support certain candidates deemed friendly to China? Would this be viewed as a democratic development? We actually know what the U.S. would do if China dumped big money into the American political bloodstream. Washington calls it “malicious” “meddling” trying to “destabilize America from within.” More recently, NED and its grantees have led efforts against propaganda and online misinformation in Russia, China, and Brazil, pushing back against Kremlin influence in Georgia (via a grantee, the International Republican Institute), promoting democracy through LGBTQI+ rights in Taiwan (via another major grantee, the National Democratic Institute), and building “support for greater integration of Ukraine into Western political and economic structures” via the Institute for Euro Atlantic Partnership.  Possibly the most effective NED actions in recent times were in helping to tip the political balance in favor of Western-approved governments in Ukraine. You can literally chart NED grants from before, during, and after the Orange revolution, through the Maidan revolution, and post-Russia invasion, today. “It was NED-funded groups that led the Maidan revolution that bitterly divided the country and led to the toppling of its elected president, setting both Ukraine and the world on the course that’s led to this current crisis,” charged Marcetic. “The fact that Elliott Abrams (convicted in the Contra affair) was on its board for years and that its current president and CEO (Damon Wilson) is a longtime NATO-enlargement enthusiast who backed Ukrainian ‘democratization’ and U.S. military entanglement in the country tells you a lot.” Meanwhile, according to Declassified UK, NED is supporting UK “press freedom” and investigative outlets like Bellingcat (2020 annual report here and policy plan here), which cut its teeth on investigating Kremlin crimes, propaganda, and election influence, has ties to the UK government, and gets pretty close to American politics. For the last eight years, Bellingcat has been absorbed in Russiagate, disinformation tracking, and seeing U.S. policy through the prism of democracies vs. autocracies, especially in Europe. No surprise that Anne Applebaum, Cold War warrior and author of Autocracy Inc.: The Dictators who want to Run the World, is on NED’s Board of Directors.  It seems almost natural then that NED’s “democracy promotion” would fit into the burgeoning misinformation/disinformation industrial complex. For example, a Washington Examiner report revealed in 2023 that NED had been part of a pantheon of grantmaking entities supporting the Global Disinformation Index, a UK outfit that rates websites, news sources, and internet advertising in order to mitigate the “financial incentives” for disinformation. Turns out, according to the Examiner, GDI had a bias, with the “worst” purveyors being conservative, right leaning news sources and websites—including U.S.-based outlets like the New York Post, RealClearPolitics, Reason, and yes, TAC.  The Examiner’s Gabe Kaminsky called it “part of a stealth operation blacklisting and trying to defund conservative media, likely costing the news companies large sums in advertising dollars.” Shortly after the story, NED pulled its support for the GDI. At the time, the NED’s vice president of communications, Leslie Aun, told the Examiner that the group’s “mandate is to work around the world and not in the United States.” “Recently, we became aware that one of our grantees, the Global Disinformation Index (GDI), was engaged in an initiative, funded by a different donor, that focused on specific U.S. media outlets,” Aun continued. “Given our commitment to avoid the perception that NED is engaged in any work domestically, directly or indirectly, we will no longer provide financial support to GDI.” It is apparent that all of these criticisms get under NEDs skin, especially the original sin of its creation, conceived by CIA Director Casey and the NSC’s Reynolds and delivered by an act of Congress, which funds NED through annual appropriations to this day. The organization publicly hit back in 2010 when ProPublica reported on a NED-funded “independent” media outlet in Burma.  “The charge that NED was established to take over the CIA’s covert propaganda efforts is ludicrous and totally unfounded. This kind of reckless and irresponsible name-calling is generally confined to the political fringe,” charged NED Director of Public Affairs Jane Riley Jacobsen. Aun herself volunteered to debate the Grayzone founder and editor Max Blumenthal after the media outlet called NED a CIA cut-out in May 2023. And they did, in a 40-minute video found here. She took umbrage with several of Grayzone’s assertions about NED. When Blumenthal asked, “How is it pro–democracy to support mobilizations that seek to remove elected leaders?”  She retorted, “Isn’t that sort of what democracy is?”  If that is not what the American people think democracy is, then the DOGE can act. If not, Congress can act, it has the power of the purse, after all. “The NED acts as a tool of a proven-unsuccessful interventionist foreign policy,” said Van Buren. “Like with most of the old CIA-inspired Cold Warriors, it is time to retire the NED.” The post DOGE’s Best First Target: the National Endowment for Democracy appeared first on The American Conservative.
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