How Sharper Than a Serpent’s Tooth it is to Have a Thankless World

Wink
Uncle Volodya says, “When I see an arrogant man, I see one less competitor.”

How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is to have a thankless child!

William Shakespeare, from “King Lear”

How can we dance when our earth is turning;
How do we sleep when our beds are burning?

Midnight Oil, from “Beds Are Burning”

NATO is sad. Just when it seemed as if the world had been made safe for democracy, freedom and unbridled capitalism…some members of the alliance went squishy. One appeared – in the persona of its president – to have been smoking jimson weed, and taken leave of his senses. The other evidently aspires to be a pirate itself, and is little better than the ravening hordes it was admitted to the alliance to help hold at bay.

Or so Christian Leuprecht would have you believe, in an opinion piece the Munk Senior Fellow of the Macdonald-Laurier Institute penned for the Globe & Mail, entitled, “NATO has bigger problems than Trump”. The Macdonald-Laurier Institute is described online as ‘right-leaning’, but that may not do it justice – suffice it to say it includes Stephen Blank (Canada-US relations, North American economic integration and co-operation) and Nathan Law (Canada-Hong Kong policy) on its board of Experts. As well as being a registered charity in Canada, the Macdonald-Laurier Institute is supported by ‘a variety of foundations’; its international funding is not disclosed anywhere that I could find, but it is a partner in the Atlas Network, which associates it with the American Enterprise Institute, the America’s Future Foundation, the American Conservative Union Foundation, the American Principles Project, the Ayn Rand Institute, the Cato Institute and a variety of other do-gooders who seem, for one reason or another, to have the furthering of American foreign-policy goals at their heart.

I frequently start these posts with a bold declarative statement, which I invite the readers to disprove, and I’m going to do so on this occasion, as well. And it’s this: NATO in its current iteration exists to further the achievement of Washington’s aims and aspirations around the world. Perhaps it wasn’t always that way, and I’m still enough of a romantic to believe global organizations often started up in the framework of altruism and the betterment of the human social condition, regardless of country of residence. But if that was ever true of NATO, it is true no longer. NATO is an instrument of American policy, which Washington whistles up when it wants to internationalize a national goal or ambition, and so camouflage its pursuit of the interests of the investor class.

Let’s try an illustrative excerpt, shall we?

As NATO celebrates its 70th anniversary this year, we are reminded not only of its contribution to bringing down the wall by containing the Soviet threat, but its continued utility in preserving peace, security and prosperity.

Ha, ha! As I believe I mentioned before on other occasions, that kind of presumptive statement reminds me of the ‘zombie hunter’ meme. What do you do for a living? I kill zombies. You see any zombies around here? You’re welcome.

What evidence is offered for the assumption that NATO prevented Soviet attempts to dominate the west? As I’ve also mentioned before now, Russia applied to join NATO in 1954. Historians report that it expected to be rejected – which it was – and used the rejection to support its allegation that “the governments of the three powers will have exposed themselves, once again, as the organizers of a military bloc against other states and it would strengthen the position of social forces conducting a struggle against the formation of the European Defense Community”. The Soviet Union considered itself a part of Europe, which it most emphatically is; far more than the United States, which rarely shows interest in joining organizations it cannot run. But that wasn’t the last time. According to Russian president Vladimir Putin, he proposed Russia’s joining NATO to Bill Clinton on the occasion of Clinton’s 2000 visit to Moscow. In his words, “Clinton said ‘Why not?’ But the U.S. delegation got very nervous”. Was Putin serious? There’s no way of knowing, but the proposal – if such it was – obviously went nowhere.

Anyway, the Soviet Union never attacked a NATO country. Not even when NATO blasted the shit out of a Soviet ally, and broke it up into constituent republics. Although the Soviet Union possessed weapons which could strike countries around the world, there is no reason to believe such weapons were not solely for its own defense if we are to accept America’s assurances that its own long-range weapons are purely defensive. Let me know when Russia is caught lying more often than Washington.

Well, I just wanted to hold that statement up to the ridicule it richly deserves. NATO did not ‘contribute to bringing down the wall’ in any meaningful way other than restraining its saber-rattling enough that the Soviet Union believed peace was possible; the Soviets accepted American assurances that if it withheld objection to the reunification of Germany, there would be no further eastern encroachment of NATO. Almost immediately, NATO added the countries of the Visegrad Group (the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland), followed by the Vilnius Group (Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Albania and Croatia) and finally the Adriatic Charter (Montenegro). A promise from Washington – and about $2.10 USD – will get you a large Americano at Starbucks.

Remember when the west was in love with Emmanuel Macron, the French president? I certainly do: the New York Times swooned that Macron had ‘handily’ won victory, ‘decisively’ defeating Marine Le Pen as voters ‘rejected her hard-right message’. The Macron triumph ‘offered significant relief to the European Union…his platform to loosen labor rules, make France more competitive globally and deepen ties with the European Union is also likely to reassure a global financial market that was jittery at the prospect of a Le Pen victory’. All these giddy modifiers are the west’s way of telling you it likes the cut of your jib – you never see western reports of Vladimir Putin ‘handily’ defeating his sad-sack opponent, whom the voters spurned like trash.

Oh, but then Macron shit the bed. In technicolor. He announced, in an interview with The Economist, that what we are currently experiencing is the ‘brain death of NATO’. Well, he instantly became like your crazy uncle who is chained to an old piece of farm machinery beside the barn. The Globe & Mail tried to soften it by suggesting he ‘quipped’ that NATO is brain-dead, making out that Macron was only joking. But the statement obviously sent shock-waves through the western community – France can no longer be trusted to uphold the Western Dream. Further, Leuprecht interprets Macron’s statement as ‘a jab at Donald Trump’.

What? Oh, I’m not unreceptive to the association of Donald Trump with brain death – in fact, the two go together like peas and carrots, as Forrest Gump was wont to say. But it seems far more likely to me that M. Macron views NATO as moribund in its current state, kept alive by machines which regulate its bodily functions, but unthinking and vegetative. His suggestion that Europe stands on the edge of a precipice, and must start thinking of itself strategically as a geopolitical power, argues if anything for much less influence from the United States and much more thinking for itself, with its own goals and plans which not necessarily echo Washington’s diktat.

The other weasel in the woodpile is Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan. He has lately made several decisive moves which have upset the staid partners of NATO, such as agreeing to purchase the Russian S-400 air-defense missile system, compounding his error by not bursting into tears on being told Turkey was no longer allowed to buy the USA’s premiere fighter, the F35. Perhaps Mr. Erdogan shares a fairly broad opinion that the F35 is a fighter like a fishbowl is a helmet; he didn’t say, although he gave the pot another stir by musing that maybe Turkey will buy the Russian-built SU-35 instead.

But it’s not Erdogan’s eccentricities that piqued my amusement; no, it was the bristling outrage directed his way by Mr. Leuprecht for ‘invad[ing] a neighbouring country, in brazen violation of international law and the rules-based order NATO claims to defend’.

Well, I’ll be dipped. Invading a sovereign country is a brazen violation of international law! Who knew? I mean, because to the very best of my knowledge, Mr. Leuprecht said nothing at all when the United States of America brazenly invaded the sovereign state of Syria in September 2014, inviting its NATO pals (the UK, Turkey, France and Canada) along for the ride. Washington’s justification that it must intervene (remember that; it’s an ‘intervention’, not an ‘invasion’) was the Bush-era self-permission the USA granted itself to invade Iraq without national or international approval – that, by the way, was also against the law. And for at least two years prior to its ‘intervention’, the USA supplied Syrian ‘opposition’ groups – *cough* al Qaeda *cough* – with vehicles, logistic support, ammunition, weapons and money.

Here’s Leuprecht’s wrap-up: “The demise of NATO would deprive Canada of its most important multilateral institution. Without this force multiplier, Canada’s standing in the world, and its ability to assert its interests, would be vastly diminished. For France to gamble on collective defence is indefensible.”

Canada currently has more or less no ability at all to ‘assert its interests’ beyond the normal courtesies accorded to democratic countries by their fellow democratic countries, unless the United States endorses such assertion. It provides Canada with the occasional pat on the head, such as Trump’s offer to pursue the cases of Canadian detainees Spavor and Kovrig in his discussions with the Chinese leader, to reward Canada for illegally detaining Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou and enabling her extradition to America to stand trial for whatever Washington decides to accuse her of having done. Maybe it never will – maybe she’s just a bargaining chip in Trump’s pursuit of a ‘deal’ with China. Whatever the case, faithful sidekick Canada blew its credibility and impartiality by playing along. If Trump actually did bring up Spavor and Kovrig’s captivity to China, it made no difference whatsoever.

NATO was formed to counter a military adversary in the Warsaw Pact. Well, actually, it happened pretty much the other way around – the Warsaw Pact was formed in 1955, six years after NATO, and owed its formation to a perception that the allied countries were organizing against the Soviet Union. I don’t know where they would ever have gotten such a crazy idea. But in the beginning, NATO sort of made sense; a powerful military alliance to counter another powerful military alliance.

However, the Warsaw Pact dissolved in 1991. Suddenly, NATO found itself without a substantial reason for being. It had no perceived enemy which was anything like capable of matching the entire alliance. Gosh, what to do?

What it did do was quickly morph its purpose into battling international terrorism and sponsors of terror. That never proved a very satisfactory rationalization, and so the alliance had to invest in periodic invasions – sorry; interventions – such as Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya, to sort of keep its hand in and stay in practice. That also proved to be a problem; the latter two military interventions were not only unauthorized, the western taxpayers began to muse out loud about why the fuck they pay taxes to the government if it is going to ignore their express will, and hare off abroad to bomb the shit out of some other hapless foe when the electorate was against it.

And so the ongoing and calculated campaign to set Russia and China up as a terrifying military enemy emerged. Or regained its momentum, since it never completely went away.

989 thoughts on “How Sharper Than a Serpent’s Tooth it is to Have a Thankless World

  1. I dunno Mark. Macron is French elite and I doubt his remark is little more than indicative of a castle (briefly) besieged by one certain Arthur whose targets were not only French but (of course!) impertinent: “I fart in your general direction!” (Monty Python, for the uninitiated.)

    https://ronaldthomaswest.com/2018/12/09/nation-vs-state-midget-macron-mini-merkel/

    (the satire is not for the faint of heart and certainly not for the politically correct….)

    The analogy I will draw in the present moment is, Daddy Warbucks has taken to the bottle and Annie is feeling lost in Paris (What! Trump left the French Special Forces to fend for themselves in eastern Syria?!? How dare he!!!)

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  2. “The Soviet Union considered itself a part of Europe, which it most emphatically is …”

    Is or was?

    It certainly isn’t now.

    No matter.

    I should just like to say that over the past 10 years, most Russians whom I ask whether they consider Russia to be part of Europe (and I frequently askthe Orcs this question) most emphatically say that they do not. And all age groups answer my question thus.

    Across the board, very many here have become pissed off with the West.

    They know who their duplicitous enemy is.

    They ain’t stupid!

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    1. I would suggest they are much more European than Asian, regardless how they identify themselves. They may not want to be a part of Europe, and the country is big enough that there is no need of that, but the people are more European in appearance and attitude than they are anything else.

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      1. Australia part of NATO? That’s the first I’ve heard that it is. Our local trash news media would have been trumpeting the news even before the pens to scrawl the illegible scribbles passing as politicians’ signatures were guided to the dotted lines by minders and bureaucrats. Of course by then NATO membership would be no more than a mere formality; probably most of Canberra is already salivating over it in the belief membership would protect Australia from an imagined Chinese invasion. Even as Hong Kong falls to pieces in anticipation of such an invasion.

        Thanks again for a detailed article.

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        1. Whoops!!! I blithely lifted most of that sentence from the reference I was using, and neglected to take Australia out – the reference did not refer to them specifically as NATO members, just as ‘allies’. Sharp eyes as usual.

          ‘Tis in all but name, though – multinational exercises on the west coast always include the Aussies, wouldn’t be the same without them. I remember an hilarious bout of piggyback jousting against the Australian Navy in Pearl Harbor, at Ward Field on the naval base. The USO folks had arranged a free outdoor concert, featuring Hawaiian singer Nohelani Cypriano. They also included what they described as a hot new all-girl act which they claimed was tearing up the nightclub scene in Honolulu, called All Points Bulletin. It was partly true; they were all girls. They were pretty terrible, or pretty but terrible. It kind of sounded to me like each member was playing a different song at the same time, and none were recognizable. Anyway, the crowd grew a little restless during the cacophony, and a piggyback-fighting competition sort of spontaneously broke out. I guess it couldn’t technically be called ‘piggyback’, because the rider was sitting on the ‘horse’s’ shoulders. My buddy Roger and I vanquished opponent after opponent, although he was skinny as a pool cue, perhaps because he was very good at keeping his feet while I was grappling. But in the end we were crushed by an Aussie couple in which the steed was built like a gun turret.

          I looked for All Points Bulletin, and the name is being used by a Chicago band, but they are not a girl act. They seem to have vanished without a trace.

          Those multinational exercises more or less always included South Korea, Japan and Singapore as well, and none of them are NATO members. Just diehard American allies.

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          1. It is still true though that Australia has had troops in Syria since September 2015 at least. I believe they would be part of a mixed force that includes troops from the US and other NATO member nations.

            Recall that Australia had to apologise along with Denmark for participating in a combined NATO attack on Deir ez Zor in September 2016, even though the planes involved in the attack that killed 50 – 60 Syrian soldiers were of types not used in the RAAF. I should think that using RAAF pilots to fly planes belonging to foreign air forces is not a usual practice but someone can correct me if I’m wrong.

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  3. Oh, but then Macron shit the bed. In technicolor.

    I always suspected that unicorns were involved!

    As for Emmanuel Micron (€µ), that’s just a case of shooting the messenger. NATO has no mission but itself. It’s claimed greatest strengh, asshole 5 ‘communal defense’ is now its greatest weakness since it expanded up to a massive foe who doesn’t roll over for its belly to be tickled.

    For me, the biggest irony of La France, is that throughout the Cold War it was not a member of NATO and decidedly independent, with it’s own sovereign nuclear triad that it could use at will (unlike the UK), and even then did not produces ICBMs, but shorter ranged IRBMs. Then came Sarko. The Cold War is dead, and he killed de Gaullism dead by joining NATO… at no apparent cost to France! Until it got invovled in NATO’s foreign adventures.

    France was the only U-ropean country with a nuclear triad that could have formed a core replacement defensive organization, say the Western European Union… except rather than switching over (there was debate) the U-ropean elites let the WEU die and Hurrah NATO! It’s been downhill ever since, the irony being that on the one hand the European Union was being built and given a legal persona, but no it’s own defensive persona. It would still have to go running to Uncle Spam! Well I guess it was considered cheaper and easier and wouldn’t upset them.

    Anyways, Patrick Armstrong has a nice post up:

    WHAT ABOUT WHATABOUTISM?
    https://patrickarmstrong.ca/2019/11/12/what-about-whataboutism/

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    1. I often wonder whether USA presented France with a bill for is liberation in 1944, following le débarquement américain as les frogs say.

      The UK paid for US lend-lease, or a large part of the bill, and is still occupied by the US military.

      France is not occupied by American forces: they were evicted by de Gaulle in 1966 after their having been there since 1951.

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  4. The Spectator: The devastating impact of Russia Derangement Syndrome
    https://spectator.us/devastating-impact-russia-derangement-syndrome/

    The more curious aspect of Russia paranoia is that it ends up achieving precisely what Putin wants

    Freddy Gray
    ####

    Most of it is very good, only to be let down in the end by the author’s blind (willfull?) ignorance. The irony is of course that he is accusing others of conspiracy theories yet he peddles his own (opinion of course) that Russia is a straw man, sic Russia’s GDP is considerably smaller than Italy’s. Not PPP, i.e. what a rouble buys a Russian in Russia, but GDP and compared to a country that has a currency controlled by… Germany! So yet again, another ‘clever’ man criticizing other ‘clever’ wo/men and still being wrong.

    I was chatting to a friend today who peddled the ‘most of Russia’s revenues are oil and gas’ and I patiently explained to him that the ‘Federation Budget’ of which oil & gas revenues is quite large, is only one of three budgets that make up the consolidated budget for the whole of Russia and thus as a propotion, income from oil & gas is quite a bit lower. Not at all insignificant, but much less. I asked him why so-called journalists a) either don’t know this; b) don’t care?

    To give him credit though, he did say ‘how is it possible that there is a military coup in Bolivia and all the big newspapers not call it a coup?’ My only response is that since ~1989 journalism wasn’t just mainly about reporting the facts, it was about how the reporter felt and thought, i.e. the journalist is part of the story (Martin Bell in Bosnia and his advocation of ‘journalism of attachment*’ even if he was a bit long in the tooth by then) and that as greenhorns they grew up with western intervention as the default norm. Now a quarter of a century later they are not only have the wheels spectacularly and undeniably(!) come off exposing the west’s macro and quantum foreign policy failures, these same figures are now senior movers and shakers in the media industry. They give the orders, they make the rules. They clearly can’t cope despite being professionals which is a fundamental reason why the dirty citizen laughs and ignores most of their ‘reporting’ and gives it equivalence with entertainment and cute animal stories.

    * https://sk.sagepub.com/books/key-concepts-in-journalism-studies/n105.xml

    https://thatspikesnotsharp.wordpress.com/2010/12/14/journalism-of-attachment/

    https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/magazine/martinbell

    Viz this last article, it contains the biggest lie of the Bosnian war that is still repeated: the West did not intervene (until it was too late). The west intervened before, during and after and this has been documented and reported. Even with the revelations afterwards of weapons dropped by air, intel passed by US soldiers in Sarajevo etc. etc., they still repeat that ‘the West did not intervene’ lie.

    They did and kept the war going much longer than it would have done, killng many more people and destroying more because western countries had a vested interest in the right outcome, regardless of the costs to the locals.

    This same pattern of ‘do something‘ has been repeated ever since to great and greater disaster and blowback particularly for U-rope and the US. The west directly supported Izetbegovic in multiple ways but behind closed doors because it suited the black v. white narrative of good v. evil as was presented by the western media as ‘leaving moslems to fend for themselves’. The west still belived that pretending to be neutral was fundamental – i.e. backing the UN while in reality it was undermining Bhoutros-Bhoutros Ghali at every turn, including covering up massacres by the ‘good guys’ against the other ‘good guys’ (e.g. bosnian croats torching bosnian moslems in Ahemici which we only found out about because the British Army went straight to the press. The UK foreing office was outraged as it messed up their neat little good v. bad narrative they had invested in peddling so much and almost wholly followed by the western media.

    This puported lack of (public) support for bosnian moslems directly fed in to massive outrage throughout the moslem world that the West didn’t care about moslem life, something that the likes of Osama Bin Laden tapped in to very effectively and gave him the human an financial resources to lead ajihad against the west. You really couldn’t make this up and be believed.

    Even the Little/Silber book referenced in the article skates over fundamental issues and events in the region. I don’t expect a fully honest and widely published book about it in the west to be published for decades. Too much has been invested in the Disney version to unpick and answer real embarassing questions of all those found wanting. Best not talk about it then. How professional!

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    1. “That’s why Russian intelligence officials tend to tell suspicious western journalists exactly what they want to hear. It makes the Kremlin seem far more powerful than it is. In their shoes, wouldn’t you do the same?”

      When was the last time a western journalist spoke to a Russian intelligence official? Knowingly, I mean – they’re everywhere, perhaps reading this over your shoulder right now. Seriously, who does the world of western journalism tap when it wants a Russian to tell it what it wants to hear? Masha Lippman. Gleb Pavlovsky. Stas Belkovsky. Alexei Navalny. Lyubov Sobol. Ksenya Sobchak. Anyone from the tight circle of with-it Russian liberals or think-tankers. None of them are Russian intelligence official, and no real Russian intelligence official would tell a western journalist what he/she wanted to hear, which is that Russia is struggling to keep its head above water economically, has fallen into rigging western elections as a way to bugger the west, and shot down MH17.

      Russian diplomats and political figures, with the glaring exception of Vladimir Zhirinovsky, are typically modest and circumspect, and anything that sounds even vaguely threatening typically comes from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Usually it is a brief but grim statement which says Russia will respond, and was inspired by the latest western provocation or ridiculous lie.

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      1. There are even more former Russian intelligence officials, as some claimed Litvenenko was once, if you take a very broad definition of ‘intelligence official’.

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  5. Here’s a nice piece that you can tag with ‘journalism of attachment’:

    SkyNudes: Russian warplanes were behind airstrikes that killed 44 in Syrian school district, first-hand testimony suggests
    https://news.sky.com/story/russian-warplanes-were-behind-airstrikes-that-killed-44-in-syrian-school-district-first-hand-testimony-suggests-

    A four-month Sky News investigation gathered evidence from eyewitnesses and survivors, and scrutinised the scene of the strikes.
    ####

    You have to get almost to the end of the article before this is mentioned:

    …The city is considered critical of both the Syrian authorities led by Bashar al Assad and the different militia groups operating in Idlib province, including the dominant group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham…
    ####

    So, in a zone still heavily infested with jihad headchoppers, ‘everyone said’ that there were no military targets/objectives whatever there. The ‘evidence’ comes from ‘independent’ media types who can operate freely in such a zone and ‘observations’ by others at Russian air bases in Syria, added to the supposition that ‘experts belive’ (who are these unnamed experts?) only the Russian military could be able to carry out such strikes.

    Yet again, this is a mass of information dumped from all sorts of sources that we are a) expected to believe are somehow neutral/reliable/non-partizan in a headchopper zone, least of all IS/ISIL/ISIS/DAESH/Whatever British origin propaganda/media arm, the ‘White Helmets’; b) is based on hearsay, supposition and projection rather than empirical data – i.e. ‘well they did it elsewhere so they must have done it here’; c) all points in the same direction.

    There’s no, ‘I’m not sure’, or ‘funny things have been going on’ or anything included that can raise even a quantum of doubt apart from the whole article is peppered with qualified language such as ‘suggests’, ‘spotters say’, ‘experts believe’. Well apparently It was exhilarating for the White Helmets who worked for more than 12 hours straight that day trying to save lives. Well thank you Sky Nudes. Where do I sign up?

    And all this before you delve in to whataboutism (sic the Armstrong piece I posted above), least of all who else have been practicing ‘double tap’ airstrikes for years…

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  6. John Solomon has hit a nerve:

    TheHill.com: Yovanovitch says John Solomon’s columns were used to push false allegations
    https://thehill.com/policy/national-security/470656-yovanovitch-says-solomon-stories-were-used-to-push-false-allegations

    ….Solomon, who no longer works for The Hill, has stood by his columns.

    “I stand by each and every one of the columns that I wrote,” Solomon said in a statement to The Hill.

    ####

    The Dems have finally realized that pooh-poohing actual investigative journalism that doesn’t show them in the best light is hitting home. It’s ok for them to spread smears, lies et al (not me) though anonymous ‘unnamed’, ‘official’ and ‘trusted sources’ though their compliant media, yet when someone else does not hide and names names and cites sources directly, it is somehow underhand! Maybe some of Soloman’s sources are not entirely kosher, but at least he is writing his stuff by the book and we know who they are. Pot. Kettle. Black.

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    1. Banderite spawn Yovanovitch perjured herself several times in the course of her deposition.
      Just one example: she claimed that President Trump (in one one his tweets) referred to her as a “clown”. In reality, Trump called her a “joker”.

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      1. Solomon’s last piece for TheHill.com

        Two names who would give Trump an all-star security team after Bolton
        https://thehill.com/opinion/national-security/460829-two-names-who-would-give-trump-an-all-star-security-team-after-bolton
        ####

        Be careful of what you wish for…

        This is a clear reminder to everyone who agrees with t-Rump that the US should no longer be the world’s policeman and start wars willy-nilly, that it will still be extremely unpleasant when it wishes and still interfere, bully, bribe/whatever allies and other countries that do not fit its goals. At least Solomon doesn’t sugarcoat it.

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        1. It’s pretty funny that Bolton emerges as the “principled one” on Trump’s team!
          A pure ideologue, he didn’t want to stain his fanaticism with Trump’s crass concerns for “doing business”. I am guessing that Bolton vowed to never shave his moustache until every last “dictator” on the planet had been overthrown.

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        2. Chock-full of horseshit in the opening paragraph;

          “Love him or hate him, Donald Trump knows exactly what he wants when it comes to foreign policy. He wants a clear definition of the American strategic interest across the globe and a commitment that war is always a tool of last resort.”

          It is in America’s strategic interest for the exact opposite to be true – a clear definition would mean that things not included in it, like, say, Syrian oilfields, would be questioned as soon as America made a move to seize them. American strategic interests are always evolving, and whenever it looks like someone else is about to get control over the main supply of something America uses, why, then it is an American strategic interest for America to have control instead. And not even the dimmest dimbulb in the bulb factory believes war is ‘a tool of last resort’ for America. Tool of last resort for everyone else, maybe, might be an American priority. The usual way America uses war as a tool of last resort is to announce the difference of opinion with Country X, and then follow it with an ominous “All options are on the table”. And then leak the news that the Seventy-Second Battalion has been given orders to gear up for deployment.

          Appointment of one of Solomon’s choices might be decided by answering the question, “How much more dislike of this country can America tolerate”? If the response is “Who gives a fuck?”, then Richard Grenell might be a good choice. Already loathed in Germany – where his current job is – he would be selected only for his perceived capability in muscling a sanctions-enabled block of Nord Stream II. As I already pointed out, Russia and Germany are prepared to complete it without the pipelaying ships, and being denied entry to the USA is starting to look like not very much of a threat for most Europeans. Interest in purchasing American LNG would be inversely proportional to having it forced on potential buyers.

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          1. I noticed that too, weak sauce examples of US foreign policy successes ‘abroad’, particularly ‘forcing’ Germany to build LNG terminals as opposed to Europe’s actual strategy of building capacity/ability from multiple energy providers whether they chose to use them or not.

            There’s no point telling someone you won’t buy their gas and get LNG instead if you don’t have the ability to onshore it in any meaningful quantity.

            Like the argument about Turkey’s smart energy diverse policy of NPP, gas & hydro, they will have overlapping energy redundancy in place for all scenarios. Common sense. I don’t think anyone has accused the Germans any.

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            1. Russia likewise is expanding both NPP and hydro along with gas for power production. The longer term plan seems to be to close the fuel cycle for nuclear power and possibly phase out gas for burning (still export gas for those who still must burn it).. Russia will dabble with renewables but, so far, has shown the good sense not to count on them for serious power production. They may expand the use of gas for transportation such as LNG for trains on non-electrified tracks, ships and CNG for local trucks and buses. Something like that.

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      2. As far as I’m concerned, its the exact opposite of ad hominem to call out banderite diaspora for their heritage or parents if they are then going to work in the State Department in their country and try all they can to implement anti-russian policies. Such a person should be viewed as a poisonous psychopath.

        I dont think I have ever heard Putin refer negatively to Galicia, the Galician image for Ukraine nor, most importantly ,to any malicious influence or activities of the North American diaspora scumbags on Ukraine- which I think is a big mistake.

        I don’t expect the useless RT to try and highlight such an issue – when it should be a first and immediate line of attack

        You can’t have this ridiculous situation where gullible Americans can fall for this BS tearjerker of “my parents fled totalitarian Communist then totalitarian Nazi regime” which is almost certainly a false narrative of how she came to North America.

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        1. I totally agree, Eric. I think it’s completely valid to call out the children and grandchildren of Nazi collaborators, when they (a) hide their family affiliations, (b) lie about their family affiliations, and (c) continue the work of their pro-Nazi ancestors.

          It would be different if the child of a Banderite had nothing to do with politics, or had a different politics from their parents, or rejected them. There are actually a few such cases, but not many. One of the amazing (to me) things about the Ukrainian diaspora, in the U.S. and Canada, is just how cohesive they are, and how they manage to continue the ideology from one generation to the next.

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          1. A classic example of this is Canada’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Chrystia Freeland. She pretended shock at the suggestion from Russia that she is the descendant of Nazi collaborators, and accused Russia of ‘smearing’ her, but it turned out to be exactly correct, as acknowledged by a few newspapers. Most, though, went with her story that it was all Russian ‘disinformation’.

            I read Trudeau is about to shuffle his cabinet, but those who claim to be in the know say she will either remain as Minister of Foreign Affairs or otherwise continue to be influential on Canadian policy. I meant it when I said I couldn’t care less who won the recent election, but although I don’t like the conservatives, one benefit of a conservative win would have been the disappearance of Freeland from the government.

            Like

            1. From an investigative-journalism POV, I think it’s important (and I wish more reporters would do this) to document the ties between the Banderite diaspora families and the insertion of these people into various governments, including stacking the Ukrainian government itself.

              It’s a classic American “long play” project, in which certain moles are nurtured for decades, and even multi-generational, with the end-game being their insertion into positions of influence and power, both at home and abroad. The CIA counts on the descendants to maintain the same anti-Russian and anti-communist ideology from one generation to the next. This is ensured by family loyalty, along with special training camps for the youth, such as the Banderite summer camps, etc. (for example, like the one where Ulana Suprun met her future hubby).

              It isn’t just Ukrainian diaspora, it’s also Baltic diaspora, and even actual Nazi diaspora, as happened in South America. Once again, it was the American CIA which seeded these people into South America. In a perfect world, all these disgusting Nazis would have been hanged back in the 1940’s, and then they wouldn’t have been able to start new families in South America.

              Tomorrow (probably) I will have a post on my blog about German Nazi families, and their role in the Bolivian coup. My source material is this piece from VESTI news:

              https://www.vesti.ru/doc.html?id=3210533&tid=114303

              Like

            2. From what I recall from reading various websites and blogs including Dances With Bears, it was actually the Polish government that drew attention to Chrystia Freeland’s family connection to Myhailo Chomiak. Warsaw had had an arrest warrant out for Chomiak for decades but couldn’t find him at all and gave up searching for him some time in the 1980s or 1990s. It was only after Justin Bieber Turdeau became Canadian PM and Freeland his Foreign Minister that the Poles were able to work out how Chomiak managed to elude them for so long: they’d been looking in the wrong places and had not thought to consider he’d been given safe haven in Canada.

              Like

              1. That certainly could be true; I can’t honestly say I recall where it originated except that I first heard of it via John Helmer. Freeland could have stopped criticism dead in its tracks by announcing that she was completely unaware of this aspect of her family history, but that it in no way reflects her own views and beliefs. She could have said she believes in holding Russia to account for its behavior, but that it has nothing to do with any untermenschen view of ethnic inferiority, and even that might have been believable. Instead, she chose to run with the story that none of it was true and it was all a crew-el Russian ‘smear’. And of course Troodledum went along with it, because he’s the good cop.

                Like

  7. According to Forbes, referring to a survey conducted by the Razumkov Center, more than three-quarters of the Ukrainian electorate would vote in a referendum on foreign ownership of Ukrainian farmland, and of those, 63% would vote against it.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/katyagorchinskaya/2019/11/11/ukraine-may-call-referendum-to-decide-if-foreigners-can-own-land/#2931447b1f3f

    Ze is not going to be able to ram this one through on a Friday afternoon when no one’s looking. The IMF and the World Bank will be so disappointed. After all, Ukraine could add 1.5% GDP growth by selling off its farmland.

    Uhhhhh….what’s it supposed to do next year?

    Like

    1. Well, how many would have voted for cutting direct flights between Ukraine and Russia, thus making it a lot more cumbersome and expensive for a few million Ukrainians each year to make essential familial and business journeys ?

      How many , in a fair democratic fight ,would have voted for signing the EU association agreement against signing one joining the Customs Union with other Eurasian states in 2013?

      How many in favour of keeping president selected governors instead of democratically elected governers for all the oblasts?

      What about not making Russian an official language anytime from 1991 – 2014?

      For all of the above I am pretty sure the Banderetards would lose in those types of referendums, yet, here we are where the wish of the Kiev authorities has been fulfilled each time.

      Ukraine simply isn’t a democratic country for it to matter what those polls say . If the authorities, big business or the Americans want it enough then this land reform will easily go through. Plus, although this is more than just a farmland issue, it has been shown with farmers protesting in the EU suffering from the Russian sanctions and countersanctions, that though they may be noisy and uncomfortable for their authorities, they are essential expendable

      Like

  8. Oh, dear; Ukrainian hackers gained access to the USA’s Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) EDGAR database via a Lithuanian server, accessing test filings and earnings statements, and sharing them with ‘a group of traders’. I thought only the Russians could do things like that, while the good honest Ukrainians occupied themselves with building blockchain applications for government procurement to make it more transparent.

    https://www.pymnts.com/news/international/2019/ukraine-aims-to-recover-lost-funds-after-taking-ownership-of-privatbank/

    Like

  9. The USA is still planning to ‘torpedo’ Nord Stream II, and according to Der Spiegel, is simply staying its hand so as to crush the project at the most delicious moment for an American triumph, just when the end is in sight.

    https://www.spiegel.de/international/world/nord-stream-2-the-cold-war-returns-to-germany-a-1296251.html

    The same source suggests the owners of the specialized pipe-laying ships (of which there are only 5 in the world) have already indicated they would stop the instant American sanctions go into effect. Russia and Germany have a plan B in which sections would be welded on land and then installed by divers, but obviously that would be much slower, and would delay the opening of the pipeline by months.

    Interestingly, Spiegel claims the Russians accused US Ambassador to Germany Richard Grenell of having traveled to Kuh-yiv immediately before the gas talks between Russia and Ukraine, and advised the Ukrainians to stand firm and allow the talks to collapse, because Uncle Sam was going to apply sanctions. He says, of course, that everything but his visit – which he acknowledges took place as described – is ‘fake news’.

    It seems to me the limiting factor is how much the USA wants to risk a complete falling-out with Europe, and a near complete freeze-out by Germany. According to German gas company Uniper, Europe could be facing a shortfall of 100-300 BcM of gas annually in the coming decade. The Netherlands is more or less completely shutting down production as early as 2022, Norway’s supplies have peaked, and Germany’s domestic production has slipped to 7% of its consumption from 15% as recently as 10 years ago. The USA’s position that Russia will control Germany is disingenuous – whoever is the dominant supplier will control Germany to that extent, and the USA wants that control to be exerted by Washington. Control of Europe’s economic engine is control of Europe.

    Just as an aside, I see a way for Russia to shove a stick through Team America’s spokes. Buy one of the specialized pipelaying ships from the company which currently owns it. They could even make a covert agreement to sell it back at an attractive price once the pipeline is completed, and Russia has the money to make any such company an offer they couldn’t refuse. The ship would be sold to Gazprom or Rosneft, and there is not a thing Washington could do about it – the deal could be sealed before they ever even heard of it. Then the new owners could tell Uncle Sam to pound sand.

    We’ll see what happens. Bets? I think the USA will decide delaying the pipeline by a few months is not worth infuriating a Europe that already does not like it very much. But it is interesting to see the emerging narrative that the USA seriously does contemplate acing out Russia to be the primary supplier of natural gas to Europe; once it specifically denied having any such commercial aspirations, and was only altruistically worried about the security of European energy supplies. No wonder it wants to keep the UK in the EU.

    Like

  10. “I say that he is the best American president, not because his policies are good, but because he is the most transparent…Each American president perpetrates all kinds of political atrocities and crimes and yet they still win the Nobel Prize and project themselves as defenders of human rights and noble and unique American values, or Western values in general.

    The reality is that they are a group of criminals who represent the interests of American lobbies such as the large oil and arms companies, among others…Trump talks transparently, saying that what we want is oil. This is the reality of American policy, at least since World War II. Do we want to get rid of such and such a person or do we want to offer a service in return for money? This is the reality of American policy. What more do we need than a transparent opponent?”

    – Bashar al-Assad

    You go, Bashar!!

    https://www.newsweek.com/trump-syria-oil-fears-us-policies-1471848

    Like

    1. I read an article (can’t find the link at the moment) where Assad indicated that resistance from the local population (with a little help, nudge nudge) will eventually force the US to withdraw from the Syrian oil field they presently occupy. He mentioned that is the reason why there will be need for a confrontation between Russia and the US to settle this matter.

      In my opinion, Assad is (again) right. And, a withdrawal under those circumstances will be humiliating to the US and empowering to others resisting similar aggression.

      Assad has the potential to be the new Nasser of the Middle East.

      Like

      1. Russia has an economy smaller than Italy is a favorite. That claim is used by both Russophobes and those who wish to minimize the Russian threat. The implication is that Russia is inherently evil with the only debate being how much danger their evilness represents.

        Like

  11. Washington Post: Alvaro Vargas Llosa: The Bolivian ‘coup’ that wasn’t

    ####

    I can only see the stub and I assume it is an opinion piece, but still showed up in gugel nudes uk feed.

    He’s a ‘fellow’ at the Independent Institute apparently.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81lvaro_Vargas_Llosa

    Álvaro Vargas Llosa is a senior fellow at the Independent Institute, who has been a nationally syndicated columnist for the Washington Post Writers Group, and is the author of the book Liberty for Latin America, which obtained the 2005 Antony Fisher International Memorial Award for its contribution to the cause of freedom. He was recently appointed Young Global Leader 2007 by the World Economic Forum in Davos.
    ####

    It’s even worse and predictable if you read further.

    What’s that you say about Chile? Just a bit of fun? Nothing to worry about. Move on!

    Like

      1. The use of ‘pen’ lasers are not a demonstraor’s panacea, but we’ll be seeing plenty more of this in future. FYI, ‘blinding lasers’ (i.e. against humans) are expressly prohibited by the UN, but have been long in use even back in the early 1980s where they were used by warships to dazzle ‘unfriendly’ craft. Either way, the prolifieration of smaller more powerful lasers will certainly lead to a growth in blindings at popular protests.

        1995 Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons
        http://www.weaponslaw.org/instruments/1995-protocol-on-blinding-laser-weapons

        The 1995 Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons (Protocol IV to the 1980 Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons) prohibits use of blinding laser weapons as a means or method of warfare as well as their transfer, to any state or non-state actor.

        The Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons was adopted on 13 October 1995 at the First Review Conference of the 1980 Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW) in Vienna, Austria, and was annexed to the CCW as Protocol IV. The Protocol entered into force on 30 July 1998.

        The Protocol was adopted to ‘counter the silent and invisible threat to human sight posed by the threat of blinding laser weapons’, deemed to cause unnecessary suffering or superfluous injury.

        Blinding laser weapons are defined in Article 1 of the Protocol as

        laser weapons specifically designed, as their sole combat function or as one of their combat functions, to cause permanent blindness to unenhanced vision, that is to the naked eye or to the eye with corrective eyesight devices.

        CCW Protocol IV prohibits the employment and the transfer of blinding laser weapons. It also imposes precautionary obligations with respect to the use of ‘laser systems’ more generally ‘to avoid the incidence of permanent blindness to unenhanced vision’. The Protocol does not define ‘laser systems’, but the category presumably includes range-finders and target designators, as well as laser weapons that do not fall within the ambit of Article 1.
        ####

        Plenty more at the link.

        Like

        1. Speaking of blinding (also burning) lasers, check out Youtube for numerous self-help videos on how to make death-rays from laser pointers. This kid is particularly interesting :

          He has posted many videos on making dangerous lasers but all with good intentions. When will they confiscate our lasers?

          Like

        2. Early during the Color Revolution “pro-democracy” protests in Hong Kong, the rioters targeted the eyes of police officers with laser beam pointers. They seem to have stopped that now and have changed their tactics to vandalising ticket machines and turnstiles at railway stations, throwing large objects onto railway lines to derail trains, putting up barricades on roads to disrupt traffic, setting elderly people on fire, stalking and harassing young women walking alone in public in broad daylight and turning their schools and universities into fortresses where they make Molotov cocktails to throw at police.

          Like

          1. At some point, China is going to get tired of soft-pedaling these protests, and go in there hard and those poor waifs are going to find their skinny asses in jail for years to come. No doubt the west will scream about freedom and democracy, but it is not legal anywhere in the west to throw debris onto the train tracks with the intent of derailing a train, to throw gasoline bombs at police or anyone else or to vandalize public property. None of those are the tactics of ‘peaceful protest’ like the west makes out is going on, and China would be correct to tell the west to mind its own fucking business.

            Like

      2. The usual manner in which the west deals with embarrassing social upheaval is to simply stop reporting it. Then readers and watchers and listeners assume it has died out, since they don’t hear any news about it. That’s another reason the western governments are steadily moving toward more and more regulation of the internet, ‘for your own good and safety’. Because it isn’t as easy to stop reporting about something on the internet. Of course, the reverse technique is used when they want to make it look as if a region is afire with passionate protest, as they do with Hong Kong.

        The usual western model – all efforts dedicated toward greater enrichment of the elite oligarchy and the investor class – has clearly emerged in Chile, and it is equally clear a substantial element of the population does not like it.

        Like

        1. Note how there is practically sweet FA yesterday in the Western media about this:

          Water cannon deployed & cars flipped as tensions run high during Yellow Vests protests (VIDEOS)
          16 Nov, 2019 14:32 / Updated 16 hours ago

          If that had happened here, the headlines would have screamed: “Putin crackdown on protest!!!”

          And it’s been going on for a year now. But when bullshitter Navalny’s kreakl creeps and schoolkids try to mob Tverskaya, according to the Western press, they are voicing legitimate protest and Putin is crapping his pants.

          Like

  12. Продажа ценного меха – господа гусары, молчать!

    Selling a valuable fur coat — Gentlemen, be silent!
    [Russian idiom, literally: “Hussars, be silent!” Sort of means: “mum’s the word” in English — ME]

    Having lost his sponsors, Navalny has begun to offer himself and Sobol for sale to unscrupulous politicians. Political analyst Ruslan Ostashko said that blogger Alexei Navalny is trying to flirt with the Communist Party because of his loss of popularity amongst the electorate.

    Earlier, the Federal News Agency, citing its own source, reported that the Communist Party is planning to “buy” the infamous associate of Navalny, FBK lawyer Lyubov Sobol, for 50 million rubles together with a salary. In exchange, by 2021 the professional fighters against the regime will have to attract protesting youth to the pseudo-communists.


    Whoopee! Sounds good to us!

    “If I’m not mistaken, four years ago he [Navalny] came to Kostroma, where a representative of the American Embassy also arrived, and there they met up with the local Communists’ leader’s son. Even then they were trying to negotiate and therefore offered their services to the Communists in order to strengthen the position of the Communist Party. At the moment, their relations are pretty close, although it cannot be said that Navalny is working for the whole party right off, because it is divided into factions or, wings”, the expert explains.

    That is to say, by approaching this Rashkin person, the head of the FBK [Fund for the Struggle Against Corruption] is flirting with rather radical Communist factions and trying to strengthen their position. And if you follow the party ratings, it becomes clear that this work is still going on and such interaction is bearing fruit. But something else is important here: if earlier Alexei Navalny did not work directly with Russian officials, since this, apparently, was below his dignity, now that times have changed and private individuals are not paying him for his pseudo-investigations, the loser blogger has had to remove his crown.

    Despite the fact that Navalny really hopes for a successful conclusion of the sale of Sobol to the Communists, he is afraid of his favourite [sidekick], because, following the protest actions of this past summer, she is more popular than the video blogger himself. At the same time, the Communist Party also does not want to get involved with Alexei Navalny, preferring to negotiate directly with Sobol.

    Nevertheless, the Communists, as deeply pragmatic people and having sufficiently large financial resources at their disposal, will do everything to drag the FBK protest asset to their side. And this can be seen from the way the Communist Party has recently intensified its work with young people. Party leaders understand that young folk are not too keen on the ideas of communism, since they have been brought up to have a negative attitude towards Soviet times, but the ideas of liberal and, under certain conditions, left-wing youth might well go for “pop socialism”

    Go down in flames, bullshitter, together with your hysteric “favourite” person!

    Like

    1. I’m afraid I’m starting to like her. She has terrific teeth, for a start, and those glasses turn me on – I can’t help it, it’s the same when Sobchak puts them on her horsey face. They just make these women look sexy. I used to think Sobol was dead ugly, but she’s really not.

      I have no time for her America-the-great political philosophy, though.

      Like

  13. The Macdonald-Laurier Institute’s list of donors can be found in its 2018 report, here: http://macdonaldlaurier.ca/files/pdf/2018_MLI_annual_report_Fweb.pdf

    Here is the list. Ministry of Defence of Latvia is the one which stands out for me. I don’t recognize most of the others, though some, such as Mining Association of Canada, are self-explanatory:

    Atlas Economic Research Foundation
    Aurea Foundation
    BCSG Enterprises
    Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business
    Coril Holdings
    Di Bartolomeo-Di
    Lorenzo-Graham Foundation
    Donner Canadian Foundation
    Duanjie Chen
    Eleanor Nicholls
    Frederick Litwin
    Geneva Network Imperial Oil Limited
    Innovative Medicines Canada
    International Centre for Law & Economics
    John Dobson Foundation
    Ledcor Industries Inc.
    Lodestar Security Services
    Lotte and John Hecht Foundation
    Max Bell Foundation
    Merck Canada Inc.
    Mining Association of Canada
    Ministry of Defence of Latvia
    Modern Miracle Network
    Motion Picture Association
    Canada Moorfield Investments
    Netflix
    Penny and Gordon Echenberg Family Foundation
    Philip Cross Economics
    PhRMA Association
    Pirie Foundation
    Rob Wildeboer
    Rothmans Benson & Hedges Inc.
    Sudhir Handa
    Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Canada
    Vaughn MacLellan
    The Wilson Foundation W. Garfield Weston Foundation

    Like

    1. Philip Cross used to work for Statistics Canada before setting up Philip Cross Economics. He is a current Senior Fellow at Macdonald-Laurier Institute. This info was found by Googling his name and his consultancy’s name.

      Sheer coincidence that Philip Cross is also the name used by a troll editor at Wikipedia who changes the entries of alt media sites and commentators to insinuate that they are all working for Vladimir Putin.

      Merck Canada Inc of course is the Canadian branch of the pharmaceutical firm. That the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office is also a donor along with the Ministry of Defence in Latvia might tell us something about the thinktank’s ideological loyalties: it must be no friend of Beijing and Moscow.

      Like

    2. They look to be a good example of how globalisation has completely flattened debate on international matters.
      Stock standard neo-liberal policy/lobby group putting out the same talking points & viewpoints you can find in hundreds of similar shops across the US, Europe, Australia, etc. – paid for by a variety of oligarchs, tax shelters for dodgy corporations and propagandists for the above. One big happy insider trading network…

      What I still find amazing is how over the last few decades the ‘management’ class now moves so freely between various outlets with no actual expertise on what the groups are officially meant to represent – you can float between NGO’s on Russia, Africa, etc. with no knowledge of the countries or issues, while holding multiple company directorships with no knowledge or experience in what the company produces.
      Doesn’t matter how many disasters they leave in their wake as it’s all down to positioning in these insider trading networks.

      Like

    1. Curiously in the 1860s Russia and the US had been friends. During the US Civil War, Russia even sent a warship to San Francisco to defend that city against possible British invasion. In those days, the common enemy of Russia and the US had been the British empire. Within 20 years of the end of the Civil War, both Russia and the US were hit by assassinations of their most senior political leaders, and one wonders if those murders were coincidences.

      Like

      1. To be fair, though , Narodnya Volya in Russia had been trying to get Aleksandr II for 5 years, killing a lot of innocent Russians in doing so before they succeeded in assassinating him by means of a bomb in 1881. NV only kicked off in 1879, 14 years after Lincoln’s assassination.

        Like

  14. There’s a slew of interesting news via Antiwar.com.

    Military.com: 11 Sailors Injured in Fire Aboard Amphibious Assault Ship Iwo Jima
    https://www.military.com/daily-news/2019/11/15/11-sailors-injured-fire-aboard-amphibious-assault-ship-iwo-jima.html

    …The Iwo Jima is at least the third Navy ship damaged by fire in the last year while undergoing maintenance, USNI News reported…
    ####

    The USN’s reliablity and practices particularly in the Pacific have been under quite some scrutiny these last few years. Over-extended, under trained, unwiling… unable???


    SCMP: With an on-campus kitchen, a production line making petrol bombs and a training camp to practise throwing them, Chinese University has become a base for Hong Kong’s radical protesters
    https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/politics/article/3037813/campus-kitchen-production-line-making-petrol-bombs-and

    …“There are ‘parents’ bringing supplies, such as food, daily necessities and materials to make petrol bombs,” he said, referring to supporters of the cause…
    ####

    Ever bigger spades for the hamsters – aka cannonfodder?

    Real Clear Investigations: The Brennan Dossier: All About a Prime Mover of Russiagate
    https://www.realclearinvestigations.com/articles/2019/11/15/the_brennan_dossier_all_about_a_prime_mover_of_russiagate_121098.html

    By Aaron Maté
    ####

    They’ve already gone after his colleague Max Blumenthal. I hope Maté is prepared.

    Neuters via DailyStar.lb: Iran gasoline rationing, price hikes draw street protests
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Middle-East/2019/Nov-15/495694-iran-gasoline-rationing-price-hikes-draw-street-protests.ashx

    Iran introduced gasoline rationing and price hikes of at least 50 percent Friday,…
    ####

    This will only encourage Washington that strangling the i-Ranian economy is working. I don’t see Tehran doing anything but escalating. Bye bye JCPOA for good.

    MiddleEastEye: The Harvard walkout: ‘Israeli officials will eventually speak to empty venues’
    https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/harvard-walkout-israeli-officials-will-eventually-speak-empty-venues

    Dani Dayan, Israeli diplomat and former leader of the Israeli settler movement, spoke to a near-empty auditorium after students staged a dramatic walkout

    ####

    Winning Washington, losing younger American generations – sic diminishing returns?

    Neuters: Russia exchanges spies with Lithuania, Norway in Cold War-style swap
    https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-norway-russia-pardon/russia-exchanges-spies-with-lithuania-norway-in-cold-war-style-swap-idUKKBN1XP0Q8

    ####

    A lot more news at today’s Antiwar.com. The news coming in from Boliva looks ominious with the threat by Justina Anes to charge Evo Morales, the expelling of suspicious Cubans and Venezuelans and indigenous Bolivarns on the march etc… And that’s even before we mention the explosive situation in Chile that the media is soft pedalling. I don’t see how the liberal, ‘white’ elites in LatAm can expect to return to their comfortable place at the top of the pyramid. Will this turn in to a bushfire? Eyes on Brazil…

    Like

  15. In reference to the cost of launching an astronaut to the ISS:

    What is notable about Boeing’s price is that it is also higher than what NASA has paid the Russian space corporation, Roscosmos, for Soyuz spacecraft seats to fly US and partner-nation astronauts to the space station. Overall, NASA paid Russia an average cost per seat of $55.4 million for the 70 completed and planned missions from 2006 through 2020. Since 2017, NASA has paid an average of $79.7 million.

    https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/11/nasa-report-finds-boeing-seat-prices-are-60-higher-than-spacex/

    The super-efficient and super-low-cost SpaceX price per seat will be $55 million each; same as the average Russian charge per seat. The Boeing seat price is in excess of $90 million each.

    The Russian price tag also included multiple weeks of training and other services likely not included in the US supplier scope.

    Oh, the US government also subsided the development of the Boeing and SpaceX capsules in the multi-billion dollar range.

    Presumably, the Russians made a good profit on the launch services yet still could out-compete their US counterparts.

    Meanwhile, Elon Musk fan club spouts the nonsense of the average Joe taking jaunts in SpaceX rockets in point to point suborbital flights for a few thousands dollars and trip to Mars for a few hundred thousand smackers. It seems like a Cargo Cult worship.

    Like

  16. P.S. Mark – I liked your post a lot, but I think we can expand the King Lear metaphor.
    If Lear = NATO, then:

    Goneril = Turkey
    Regan = France
    Cordelia = Ukraine

    (I made you think about that last one – haha!)
    Hint: Cordelia is the most loyal to Papa, but also the least flattering of his ego.
    Okay, one out of two…

    Like


    1. The picture above, taken from the article posted above by DAVIDT, could be almost any of the main routes out of Moscow now and resembles the Mozhaisk Highway that my family sometimes use when we hire a van at the beginning of the dacha season in order to get a load of gear out to our country property.

      My elder daughter was at Seliger Lakes last summer, getting brainwashed, no doubt, by the Evil One and his cronies at a youth camp.

      I have photos of her with LDPR leader Zhirinovsky, whom, curiously enough, my Lena liked a lot. She said she attended a seminar that he ran there and he did not act the clown, but, in her opinion, spoke convincingly and rationally. She said he was quite a likeable bloke, in fact.

      Like

    2. The pictures look very like what I saw in eastern lo-land-of-Po-land not too long ago. These roads were clearly signed as EU funded. Once you were off them and heading in to the sticks, the nice roads peter out in to the usual ‘can’t be too assed’ roads.

      Like

    3. That damaged roadway looks virtually identical to the street in front of our business. This street serves numerous businesses in the industrial park yet it has been deteriorating for years with only occasional cosmetic repairs (a guy with a shovel tossing some black gunk in the worst of the pot holes).

      If this winter will be as bad as early indications, the road may be virtually impassable this Spring. Since all of these business rely on truck transportation, this is a big deal (not to mention the damaged wheel rims and suspension components in the cars and trucks of the people working at these businesses).

      The businesses have banded together to protest to the city. The response is they are working on a multi-year plan that will globally address all road issues, revamp expressway access and relocate traffic signals. In other words, its laying a political smoke screen, means to funnel money to favorite consultants and to hide the fact they have no money for road maintenance.

      Part of the problem is that the city’s property tax base was sharply reduced when a very large power plant within city limits was able to convince the state to significantly reduce its assessed value. The salad days are over for the city but they are reluctant to cut the fat so they screw the residents and businesses.

      Like

      1. I wonder if we were to throw petrol bombs and shoot arrows at the police would result in favorable coverage by the NYT? We can block traffic and march with pots full of holes (pot holes, get it?); the pot hole revolution can not be denied.

        Like

        1. I think if you tried to do such stunts in the U.S., you’d be gunned down by a helicopter SWAT team.
          America is such a f**cking police state now, I attended a symphony concert yesterday, and the local Gestapo had set up metal detectors at the entrace, they were pretty much frisking everybody who came in, also pawing through ladies handbags. Which is very unchivalrous, I reckon. And Americans, being a herd of sheep, just take it, and even smile and joke with the guys who are frisking them and pawing through their bags. I don’t: I glare at them angrily, that’s my personal form of protest.

          Then I realized, too late, that I had forgotten to leave my little pocket knife in my car, it was still in my pocket. But when I walked through the metal detector nothing happened. So, possibly just a bluff!
          Not to worry, I did not use my little knife to stab anybody in the course of the concert, just sat and listened to the music. (It was pretty good, actually.)

          Like

          1. Things might have turned out far differently had the tenor’s voice cracked.

            I read recently that the TSA had offered a $15,000.00 prize for the winning idea from the public on how to speed up security at airports, presumably without compromising the actual security aspect. They realize how much frustration and hatred it invokes for people to have to remove various dress items (I had to take off my belt once, as if I might be concealing 25 pounds of Semtex behind the buckle) and shuffle through interminable lines, and sometimes be hauled off to secondary screening by gum-chewing, vacant-eyed louts who struggled to get past Grade 9. Once I had to be pulled out of line because a preliminary test had allegedly suggested gunshot residue (GSR) on my hands, and all I can say about that is it must be a pretty unreliable method, as I have not even held a gun since the last time I had to requalify in the navy, which would have been years before that incident. Theoretically you have to requalify every 18 months, but Training Chiefs are always harassed and overworked and it is common for them to miss you for years for a qualification which is typically not as important to the navy as are damage control and firefighting.

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              1. Your little pocket knife could have come in handy at this concert in Zurich in 2011, when one of the piano strings snapped while the pianist was hammering out her adaptation of English (Liverpool) heavy metal Carcass’s song “Corporeal Jigsore Quandary”:

                Like

                1. Oh, yes, I could have been a hero that day.
                  By leaping up onto the stage and cutting the rest of the strings.
                  To the sustained applause of the ear-weary audience…

                  Like

            1. In the US, there is an option called “TSA Precheck” which routes you to a screening area where laptops can be kept in luggage and no need to take off jackets, shoes or belts. The waiting time is also usually less.

              Another US option is called “Clear” something. This gets you through the ID check upstream of security. A biometric check is done (fingerprint or iris scan) and you are on your way to security screening. This options is fairly costly and would make sense if traveling by air at least 15-20 time per year.

              For entry into the US, there is another option that allows bypassing the potentially long lines at passport control. However, the Detroit airport (DTW) where I fly out of, has an exceptionally efficient and courteous passport control so its not worth the money.

              For international flights out of DTW, they often use facial recognition cameras thereby eliminating the passport check and ticket scan at the gate – convenient but a little unnerving considering the implications of machine identification of people.

              Perhaps Canada has similar options.

              Like

              1. It might have, but it’s not usually something that I research much, since I only fly maybe once a year, sometimes every two years. We don’t have a lot of vacation time together, and we sometimes go local or within reasonable driving distance, so I don’t fly often. There are frequently attractive options that will keep you out of the lineup, but you must surrender a considerable amount of personal information to the authorities (after all, they need to make sure you’re not a terra’ist), and all of that is retained forever, as well as making it very easy to follow you everywhere you go. I realize they can already do that by monitoring where and when you used your credit card, vacation plans you alert your bank about, and so on. But I’m as lazy as the next person, and scrupulously dealing on a cash-only basis is a lot of extra work. As well, even that is an alert for suspicion for some, as it suggests somebody trying to pass with the minimum of indicators which can be checked; it’s like buying a burner phone.

                The US government is only the best-known for obsessive surveillance and constant collection of information on the movements of both domestic and international travelers. I’m sure all governments do it to some extent. Privacy is just a word. It doesn’t mean anything any more. I took a trip to California probably 20 years ago, to deliver my daughter’s car to where she was working near San Diego; that job was coming to an end, and she wanted to drive back at her leisure, make a little holiday of it. She had gotten there by bus and had an open return, so I dropped off the car and took the bus home. Boy, long-distance bus travel sucks. But that’s another story. I did not tell my bank I was going, and they became alarmed when they saw credit-card transactions appear in the USA. They told me later they did not put a block on the account only because the amounts were so small (buying gas) and the path so predictable, it just did not look like the behavior of a thief.

                Of course this control at a remove is sold as ‘for your own safety’, and as a reward for allowing it, the bank usually absorbs the fraudulent charges if someone does steal your credit-card information. But the fact remains that if the police are interested in you for any reason, between your cell phone, social media and your credit cards, there’s a wealth of information they can mine on your movements. That advantage, I hardly need to say, is often abused.

                Like

                1. It has been said that the US is the most totalitarian state every to have existed. There is absolutely no need for the massive data collection on every individual for “security” of the citizens but certainly for the security of the 0.1%.

                  Like

    1. He is entertaining, informative and his style should work well with the millennial and the like. I did wonder what this “election audit” was. Now it know – its just a catchy phrase that sounds so official and objective. Just say it with that BBC accent and you know it must be true.

      Sure, the lithium is a factor but, as we all know, it more about policing the neighborhood; need to tamp down any efforts by national governments to gain control of natural resources for the benefit of its citizens even if the dollar value is relatively modest. Its the PRINCIPLE !

      Like

      1. Another guiding principle is that no socialist government can be allowed to exhibit any evidence of success – such a government operates in direct contradiction to America’s ‘trickle-down’ model, in which the richest are favoured so that their wealth can support the economy through private ownership, and jobs, jobs, jobs. In reality the wealthy almost always set aside as much of their wealth as they can outside the country, because for so long as it remains on US territory it is subject to taxes the wealthy consider unfair. Be that as it may, Washington and its corporate string-pullers have it as a policy that socialist governments cannot be seen to succeed. Hence Washington’s enmity toward figures such as Chavez, Maduro and Morales, and its joy when malleable capitalists come to power such as occurred in Brazil, Ecuador and Chile.

        The sad thing is that although some of these countries may one day realize their error (where the new government was actually supported rather than simply imposed upon them) and give a mix of socialism and capitalism another try, Washington must be allowed to ruin it first, so that it has to start all over again at square one. And at about the point it starts to make decent headway while achieving a measure of income equality, the west starts agitating again amongst the elites who believe they deserve more in terms both of leadership role and personal wealth. It is an old, old pattern.

        Like

        1. This is one reason why I personally believe that a mixture of capitalism and socialism cannot work in Latin America. I mean, it could work in theory, but, realistically, not if the capitalist sector is always trying to subvert the other sector and calling in Uncle Sam’s goons to give them an unfair advantage.

          The only reason that Cuba didn’t experience this kind of counter-revolution, is because Castro and his people got rid of the capitalist sector. And I think that’s the lesson to be drawn.

          It might work to have just a small capitalist sector, but heavily taxed and monitored, and not allow them or their political parties to have any influence over the military. And especially, NEVER send them to the U.S. for training. If they need training, then send them to Cuba!

          Like

          1. I think what really helped Cuba was that the US and its exiled Cuban collaborators engaged in a series of blunders culminating in the Bay of Pigs invasion and the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. After this the US had to back away and rethink what to do. Certainly the US President at the time, John F Kennedy, had second thoughts and backed away completely from the foreign policy agenda he was following at the time. And perhaps in doing so, he unintentionally signed his death warrant; it must have been from that time onwards that the people who wanted to get rid of him went into action to plot his murder.

            After JFK’s assassination, the US public reaction must have been such that any plans to invade Cuba again must have been put into cold storage and the CIA had to be content with plotting up to 638 different ways to get rid of Castro. Then the civil rights campaign started and the US commitment to the Vietnam War ratcheted up with the compulsory draft (which people resisted) and that in itself led to the huge expenditures and a skyrocketing debt load that later forced Richard Nixon when he became President in 1969 to take the US off the gold standard and turn the US dollar into fiat currency. All this relegated invading Cuba and getting rid of Castro to the back burner.

            Like

            1. Certainly the Soviet Union had a role in tamping down overt aggression against Cuba. Kennedy may have had a Damascus road conversion brought about by the Bay of Pigs debacle in that he began uttering crazy talk such as joining the Soviet Union in going to the moon, ending the Cold War and getting out of Vietnam.

              Back in those days, the MSM was not nearly as organized nor monopolistic, the NGOs were hardly a presence, the MIC was still a work in progress and the CIA and other intelligence agencies were not fully integrated into the the general decision making process of the deep state (itself not fully formed yet, I suspect). So, policy change required assassinations. Nowadays, policy change is via information and thought control within the US although the occasional murder is used if the victim is not high profile but otherwise troublesome (thinking Seth Rich). Of course, assassinations are preferred outside the US for their cost-effectiveness and deeply resonating message.

              Like

      2. Patient Observer, I don’t know if you watched the rest of the Lee Camp show after the Bolivia segment; but he actually came up with a pretty great meme in the segement about “Poverty Porn”. I think Lee actually invented that term, right before our eyes. Poverty Porn.

        It rings so true: American sheeple are trained to celebrate individual acts of personal charity, as if that’s the only way to alleviate human suffering. And it kind of gets them off to see other people suffering, and then somebody being nice to them. It’s kind of sad, because so many Americans are actually good-hearted, and it touches them to see some individual helping another individual. But also deadens them to the reality that the government itself (which should actually be responsible for the citizenry) accepts no responsibility to help its own citizens. And hence, the fake stimulation of Poverty Porn.

        This rings true to me, as, in the office where I work, people are busily working on a charity project to “Adopt a family for Christmas”. The shtick is to find a poor but worthy family in the community who can’t afford to buy Christmas presents for their kids; but never fear, well-meaning employees will pitch in to buy gifts.

        I don’t begrudge any little kiddies their barbie dolls, but, er, wouldn’t it be more dignified for their own parents to have guaranteed jobs that pull in a living wage, so they can buy presents for their own offspring? What lesson will this teach the kiddies? Well, the Blanche Dubois lesson: “In this dog-eat-dog world that we live in, the government regards us as worthless shit, therefore we must rely on the kindness of strangers.”

        Like

        1. The poverty of our century is unlike that of any other. It is not, as poverty was before, the result of natural scarcity, but of a set of priorities imposed upon the rest of the world by the rich. Consequently, the modern poor are not pitied… but written off as trash. The twentieth-century consumer economy has produced the first culture for which a beggar is a reminder of nothing.

          John Berger

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          1. Yalensis and One-Off – Good observations and painfully accurate. The wealthy NEED to have as much contrast as possible (in wealth, possessions, special access, etc) with respect to the rest of humanity.

            I was watching a video promotion of a Hollywoodeque effort to bring clean water to parts of the 3rd world. It was nothing but an emotional scam. “New technology” to wring moisture out of the air was mentioned (same scam has been floating around for years), Hollywood stars to the rescue. The reality is a few billion dollars and a lot of grass-roots organization would bring clean/safe fresh water to those who need it but the f’ing wealthy don’t want that – it would upset the natural order of the world they created.

            They must have poverty for the masses to fulfill their inner needs. I use the word “poverty” in the most general way – lack of food, clean water and health care, lack of mental and spiritual development, lack of understanding of how the f’ing world works. That is the poverty they want. They also need eager human remora to feed their ego and satisfy their fleshy desires.

            They play a lethal game. They hate socialism because it threatens their exaltedness. No therapy will fix them.

            The feel-good moment of charity is blinding as well as Yalensis mentioned. I remembered a show called Queen for a Day in which a poor but deserving woman would be put on the show and given a new washing machine or vacuum cleaner or something. She would predictable cry in gratitude making everyone feel good. I hated the show even at a young age as it was using that woman for entertainment purposes. She was forgotten by the next week; just a prop to be replaced by the next prop.

            We Americans have become experts at kidding ourselves to hide from a larger and troubling reality. Sorry for the rambling rant.

            Like

    2. Yes, I saw that story, and it looks to me as if Karl was way out in front on that one. According to my go-to source for economic data, Trading Economics, Bolivia’s economy has experienced wild swings from positive to negative as the government struggled for control of the economy, from a GDP annual growth figure high of +17.6% in 2004 to a low of -15.7 in 2008. The on-site analysis of GDP growth reads,

      “Bolivia’s economy has been growing steadily in the last few years mostly due to exports of commodities including natural gas, silver, zinc and soy. Bolivia has also the second largest natural gas reserves in South America and holds the world´s largest known reserves of lithium, which are yet to be explored.”

      Depending on your definition of ‘last few years’, Morales was President for most or all of that period. By way of comparison, GDP growth for the UK reached a record high of 5% in 1973. It could be said to have a much steadier economy, but absent major gains and looking pretty close to operating at its full potential.

      https://tradingeconomics.com/bolivia/gdp-growth

      Additionally, look at the individual contributors to Bolivian GDP growth; Agriculture (all figures in the national currency) up 1.99 Billion from 1,52 Billion. Construction, up 403 Million from 274 Million. Manufacturing, up 2.06 Billion from 1.76 Billion. And so on. Accusations that Bolivia is just a gas station masquerading as a country would be off the mark. although the government does realize extensive revenue from that sector after nationalizing the resource. You ever notice that nationalization of a major resource often causes Washington to notice that the population needs some freedom and democracy? I have a feeling it was not so much the amount of growth that invoked unrest among Bolivia’s opposition as where that growth was going.

      The Consumer Price Index climbed fairly steadily in 2019, perhaps due to generated unrest, but the climb was still modest and the inflation rate remained at an unremarkable 2.5%

      https://tradingeconomics.com/bolivia/consumer-price-index-cpi

      A far cry from the incredible inflation rates of thousands of percent claimed in Venezuela, another popular target for American destabilization efforts using the national elite as a proxy. Meanwhile, GDP per capita is up, both as an averaged national figure and adjusted for purchasing power. Standard & Poor’s (S&P) credit rating for Bolivia stands at BB with stable outlook. The country has a trade surplus of 75.7 Million USD as of July this year, while exports were up $840 Million USD in July over the previous month’s $753 Million.

      Contrast that with the west’s European bauble, Ukraine, with a balance of trade at a record deficit of -1.2 Billion in September 2019, and a $200-Million USD decrease in exports between August and September. In one country, the west is trying to make the economy succeed. In the other, it is trying to make it fail. Which do you think the west is better at?

      Like

      1. With regard to those GDP growth figures that Trading Economics quotes from 2017 onwards, you really need to know what the figures have been right across the entire period when Evo Morales was President of Bolivia starting from 2006 when he first became President.

        The drops that occur in July each year in 2017 and 2018 could be part of a trend that has been ongoing for several years and might be no more than a reflection of certain industries experiencing lulls in production for some reason or other. This is what we might expect in countries whose economies are very dependent on a small number of mining and other extraction industries. Maybe in July each year these industries have to slow down or even stop because they are waiting for supplies to come in from overseas (remember, Bolivia is a landlocked country so everything has to come by air or go through a neighbouring country) or local physical conditions force periodic shutdowns. The areas in Bolivia where lithium is mined have an extremely harsh highland desert climate: that’s why they have salt pans.

        I clicked on the 10Y and 25Y tabs at that Trading Economics link and got results resembling an electrocardiograph read-out of a patient with heart arrhythmia – but the read-out after 2008 is much less extreme and you can see regular bumps that suggest there are periodic slowdowns during calendar years. The main takeaway is that under Morales, the Bolivian economy has been on a more stable path than it had been before his time.

        Like

        1. Yes, I looked at it on ‘Max’, and it was probably pretty close to what you saw at 25 years. Wild swings positive and negative like a car lurching from ditch to ditch. But Morales and his socialist revolution certainly did no worse in any aspect except pleasing the elites, and a great deal better in most economic aspects. It remains to be seen what plans the ‘interim president’ has for the country, but I would not be very much surprised to see a raft of State Department officials huddling with her shortly to put the country on an American-friendly economic course.

          Like

  17. AINOnline: Turkey is now Russia’s most popular international destination
    http://www.rusaviainsider.com/turkey-now-russia-popular-international-destination/

    …Russian airlines registered a 52.3 per cent traffic growth on flights …

    …In the January to September 2019 period, Russian airlines collectively carried 99.1 million passengers, of which 42.9 million travelled internationally and the remaining 56.3 million within Russia. The year-on-year growth rate of the combined international and domestic traffic in the period was 11.2 per cent…

    …Flights from Moscow to Sochi on the Russian Black Sea coast (down by 1.8 per cent) and Simferopol in Crimea (up four per cent) rank second and third respectively. ..

    Like

  18. Well, well; Andriy Radchenko thinks that Ukraine doesn’t need aid from the USA. No, what it needs is…land reform. It needs to do away with that stuffy policy which prohibits sales of Ukrainian farmland to foreign interests, and sell, sell, sell. Why, it could mean a boost of $15 Billion to the Ukrainian GDP! Or even $100 Billion! Jeez, when you’re throwing around numbers without substantiating any of them, why think small?

    https://news.yahoo.com/ukraine-doesn-t-aid-needs-210100946.html

    Who’s Andriy Radchenko? I’m glad you asked. Well, he’s a Ukrainian businessman and banker, and – just coincidentally – manager of the agrarian sector. He’s also head of the state-owned PJSC Agrarian Fund, and as such he would stand to reap a generous portion of that $15 Billion. Or $100 Billion. Or whatever.

    Like

  19. My latest , on the Syrian army taking over a third abandoned American military base (on Syrian soil). With a little help from Russian MP’s.

    Tomorrow’s post should be the one I had originally planned to do today, about the Bolivian situation and the Latin American Nazis, and so on.

    Like

  20. Euractiv: Russia’s EU ambassador: The fall of the Berlin Wall was ‘a victory of common sense’
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/defence-policy/interview/russias-eu-ambassador-the-fall-of-the-berlin-wall-was-a-victory-of-common-sense/

    In a wide-ranging interview, Russia’s Ambassador to the EU Vladimir Chizhov spoke about gas transit talks with Ukraine, NATO and EU enlargement, nuclear arms control, Russia’s sales of the S-400 anti-aircraft system, the anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall and Brexit.

    …Stockholm is only one element. There are also some really crazy decisions by the Ukrainian anti-monopoly authority, piling another 6.5 billion dollars for Gazprom allegedly having a dominating position in gas transit. But Gazprom doesn’t own the transit system. It buys services from Ukraine. It doesn’t offer services to have a dominating position. This is pure absurd.

    And then, as I understand, Naftogaz of Ukraine is contemplating another lawsuit of 11 billion dollars. These are figures taken from the clouds. We want to see this resolved in an agreed manner, and we hope that will happen…
    ####

    Read it all at the link.

    Chizov is yet again, very good.

    Like

    1. I think the original position taken by Moscow – that gas transit through Ukraine could still continue if it was economically feasible – is the correct one and the most likely to withstand challenge. Everyone in the west understands how money works, and that those who offer a service hope to profit, as well as the foolishness of risking an investment where it is likely to be seized. Past history has shown the Ukrainians will simply not pay for a service if they consider they are owed money, until they have stopped payment on an amount they consider to be equal to the debt. For so long as Ukraine keeps squalling about fantastic amounts owed it by Russia for this slight and that transgression, no gas should go through Ukraine. Gas going into it for national use must be paid for in advance.

      The west, and Americans especially, are fond of adopting a holier-than-thou attitude, like “I would totally do it if it was me”. Fine; do it. Put a significant investment into Poroshenko’s candy company. See how it does.

      It is perfectly understandable why Russia is reluctant to transit gas through Ukraine: (1) the GTS is old and decrepit, and a considerable amount of the gas transited leaks out before it reaches European connectors; (2) Once you commit to a deal with Ukraine, its businessmen know the west will rigorously hold only one side to the deal, and Ukrainians are free to steal as they wish while Washington and the western media cover for them, and say stoppages illustrate what an unreliable partner Russia is, and (3) Ukraine has declared itself a military enemy of Russia. Profits realized from transit fees are likely to support regeneration, resupply and replacement of Ukrainian military assets whose declared purpose is to be used against Russia.

      Like

  21. Neuters via Antiwar.com: Belarus threatens to pull out of Russia integration deal over subsidy row
    https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-belarus-election-lukashenko/belarus-threatens-to-pull-out-of-russia-integration-deal-over-subsidy-row-idUKKBN1XR0AY

    Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko on Sunday threatened to pull out of signing an integration deal with Russia next month if Moscow failed to resolve their dispute over energy subsidies…
    ####

    I do wonder who it will be first to pull the trigger, Lukashenko or his ‘new’ friends in the West who I’m sure would be happy to offer him a multi $b IMF loan.

    Russia has strategic patience on its side.

    Like

    1. Agreed, and I think Lukashenko knows better than to accept any kind of deal offered by the west. He fancies himself a kingmaker and a strategic genius, and he has pulled off some clever plays in the past, but there have been nascent attempts to regime-change him out of power and he knows very well who was responsible. Any deal he signed with the west would come with all sorts of strings such as an inrush of western political NGO’s and the like, which would spit on their hands and get straight to work building a political opposition.

      Russia need only say, please yourself, and start withdrawing commitments it has already negotiated. Lukashenko must know full well that the west would love to do a deal with Belarus and thereby build a bastion from which to attack Russia, but the first order of business would be getting rid of him.

      Like

      1. Euractiv mit AFP: Observers slam Belarus polls for flouting democratic norms
        https://www.euractiv.com/section/europe-s-east/news/observers-slam-belarus-polls-for-flouting-democratic-norms/

        “These elections have demonstrated an overall lack of respect for democratic commitments,” Margareta Cederfelt, leader of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s (OSCE) short-term observer mission, told journalists in Minsk….

        …Russia also endorsed the election, with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov telling his Belarusian counterpart in Moscow that the elections were an important event.

        “I would like to congratulate our Belarusian friends on holding them successfully,” Lavrov said, RIA Novosti news agency reported…
        ####

        Spake too soon? The wheels on this bus are gone gone gone! Or is Brussels going to look the other way for strategic reasons? Russia isn’t dumb enough to start fights on its borders, unlike its neighbors…

        Like

  22. The American military rationale for remaining in Syria continues to evolve. In its latest iteration, the military acknowledges it is there to protect the oil installations, but from ISIS, although the same article stipulates that the American president’s position is that ISIS has been defeated. You just never know when they will stage a comeback.

    https://www.npr.org/2019/11/13/778637632/in-syria-u-s-military-says-fight-will-continue-against-isis

    Like

    1. Per the network evening news broadcasts, the American presence is to protect the oil from Iran and Hezbollah. Trump needs to watch more news shows to keep up to date on these matters.

      Like

      1. Let’s pretend that’s true. At the same time the USA is putting a grubby thumb in Iran’s eye (Iran and Hezbollah were invited into Syria by its elected leader), it is softening its stance on Israeli settlements in the West Bank. The Trump administration’s position now is that such Jews-only settlements on Palestinian land are ‘not inconsistent with international law’.

        https://www.dw.com/en/us-changes-stance-on-israeli-settlements-no-longer-inconsistent-with-international-law/a-51303488

        The Israelis are gobbling up Palestinian land at an accelerated rate since The Donald took the reins. Just what Netanyahu needs to keep him out of jail – he will have the backing of the powerful settler lobby, and America plainly thinks Israel would be best off with Benny still in power. He knows how to get things done.

        It seems like every day the United States makes another decision to make itself more hated in the world. As if it doesn’t even care any more.

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  23. https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/11/18/bund-n18.html

    “In her keynote speech at the Munich Armed Forces University earlier this month, Kramp-Karrenbauer announced the expansion of German war missions and openly demanded that German soldiers be sent as a show of force against China. With its “economic and technological power” and “global interests,” Germany cannot simply “stand on the sidelines and watch.” Instead, the army must assume the “role of an agenda-setting power” and be ready to “fully exploit the whole spectrum of military means if necessary.”

    The Defence Minister made this point absolutely clear on Tuesday. Following the swearing in of the new recruits, she went immediately to the German Employers Conference in Berlin, where she proposed a major corporate tax reform to the assembled industrialists.

    Kramp-Karrenbauer began her speech by saying that she had just come from the Reichstag building, “where a military swearing in ceremony has taken place in public for the first time in many years.” She explained that she was mentioning this because the question of the army and “the question that concerns you” are closely connected. Security and economic stability are taken for granted in the German population, but neither one nor the other is self-evident, she continued.”

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annegret_Kramp-Karrenbauer#Foreign_policy
    Early onset dementia compounded by psycho warmonger whore syndrome.

    In a confrontation between Germany and China the krauts would be annihilated.
    What can she possibly be thinking???

    Like

    1. Be afraid, be afraid very afraid, you Commie bastard Chinks and Mongol-TatarRussian scum!

      FFS!!!

      Take a look at that tank officer Walthemathe at 2:54! When did he last squeeze into a tank, I wonder?

      And those bivouacs at 3:43 would be wondrously effective should they dare open an Eastern Front here as they did in 1941!

      Like

    1. Imagine the grateful welcome home blow jobs these heroes got from their texas blonde honeys….!!!!! All American boys!!!!

      Like

  24. BBC:

    Russia corruption: Putin’s pet space project Vostochny tainted by massive theft
    By Laurence Peter
    BBC News
    7 hours ago

    Galeotti is allowed his two penn’orth, of course:

    Prof Mark Galeotti, a Russia expert at the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), told the BBC the Vostochny scandal highlighted the scale of corruption in Mr Putin’s huge state bureaucracy.

    “How can you deal with it without declaring war on your own elite? He’s not prepared to do that. This dependency on mega-projects almost invariably creates massive opportunities for embezzlement,” Mr Galeotti said.

    Well, they are being dealt with, aren’t they, Galeotti, or have you missed that point of information?

    The point that is seemingly brushed over by the BBC is that the corruption has been exposed and investigated, and continues to be investigated, by the Russian Federal Investigative Committee (SK) [the BBC calls it “Russia’s Federal Investigative Committee”, albeit that the SK does not “belong” to Russia, and not “Putin’s Federal Investigative Committee”, which is rather unusual for the BBC, which almost invariably describes everything as regards the Russian state as “Putin’s”] and that the thieving bastards have been and continue to be banged up for a long time.

    Like

    1. I’m sure Elon Musk’s Space X project will challenge and even exceed Lord Vlademort’s pet Vostochny space launch project in the blow-out costs / extra taxpayer subsidy department.

      Like

    2. Make up your mind, Mark – if the Russian economy has been driven into penury by American sanctions, and the country cannot borrow abroad because it is an international pariah, how does Putin have the money for these mega-projects which the oligarchs are stealing blind? I see a disconnect there.

      Before removing the note in thy neighbour’s eye, attend first the bean in thine own, Professor. The UK is one of the world’s premiere money-laundering centres. The Grauniad takes it to task; but, of course, since it’s Oliver Bullough, the stolen money may be Putin’s. Mustn’t stray too far off the reservation.

      https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jul/05/how-britain-can-help-you-get-away-with-stealing-millions-a-five-step-guide

      The scandal has been big news in Denmark and Estonia, but barely grazed public consciousness in the UK. This is strange, because Britain played a key role. All of the owners of the bank accounts that first aroused Wilkinson’s suspicions had their identity hidden behind corporate structures registered in the UK – including Lantana Trade LLP, the one that may have been connected to Putin. That means this is not just a Russian, Estonian or Danish scandal, but something far closer to home. In November, Wilkinson told a European parliament committee that the countries hosting these companies are just as culpable. “Worst of all is the United Kingdom,” he said. “The United Kingdom is an absolute disgrace.”

      Like

  25. What Pensions Did Putin Steal From “Oppositionists”?
    November 18, 2019
    Stalker Zone

    Written by a certain Blondinka Blondinka, whose English is very good, but some things she wrote are grammatically wrong and bug me:

    She begins [corrected by me]:

    Now from every corner an over-the-top cry rings out from the opposition about Putin stealing their pensions from them.

    They cry that now, due to pension reform, they will not live up to retirement.

    They have cried that Putin has stolen 5 years of their pension money.

    They have poured their combustible tears all over the Russian segment of the Internet.

    But since Moscow does not believe in crocodile tears, I have decided to check what in fact Putin has stolen from this sobbing Yaroslavna.

    Note
    Yaroslavna: in Borodin’s opera “Prince Igor”, she is Prince Igor’s wife. She awaits her husband’s return from leading his army against the Polovtsi and cries:

    Ах, плачу я, горько плачу я

    Akh, plachu ya, gorka plachu ya: “Ah, I shed tears, bitter tears shed I’.

    Further down, following graphics and arguments against these “opposition” whiners, Blondinka should have written:

    In the USSR, unlike Putin’s Russia, the age of survival of pensioners since the early 1960s did not increase at all, but decreased, especially for men.

    I.e., Putin stole from 20% of men the opportunity to be in the cemetery without having lived to see 65.

    How terrible to live in this country!

    Moreover, if Putin had not come to power, and Russia had continued to be ruled by liberals, then, judging by the trend, after a short period of time, not only would all men not have lived up to 65, but only a few of them could have done that.

    My grammatical correction has been made to the conditional statement (3rd conditional), which I have written in bold italics, and which is the bane of Russian-mother-tongue speakers of English.

    Blondinka had typically written:

    Moreover, if Putin did not come to power, and Russia would continue to be ruled by liberals, then judging by the trend, after a short period of time, not only would not all men live up to 65, but only a few of them could do it.

    That “Royal” alcohol which she refers to was 96% proof “vodka” imported from South Africa.


    Thanks a lot, Nelson!

    Love what you wrote Blondinka Blondinka

    Right on the ball!

    I’d love to meet up with you, only her indoors wouldn’t let me.

    Like

  26. Oh, and Yaroslavna’s bitter tears were not shed in vain. Prince Igor eventually came back, but only after having suffered a huge defeat at an away match, from which, as legend would have it, only 15 of his encircled army escaped:

    Like

  27. Interestingly, that battle of encirclement — “cauldron battle” from Norman-French, though I prefer “kettle-slaughter” (cf. German “Kesselschlacht”) — where Prince Igor’s army was utterly destroyed, allegedly took place in what is now Lugansk Oblast’, not far from where there have been such encirclement battles in more recent times.

    Like

  28. EC recommends Kiev to return to direct gas purchases from Russia
    The European Commission wishes Kiev to buy Russian gas in the amount of around 15 bln cubic metres per year, according to a source

    «По сценарию очередной газовой войны»: на Украине назвали неприемлемым предложение «Газпрома» по транзиту

    11:04 “According to the scenario of the next gas war”: Ukraine has said that the Gazprom transit offer is unacceptable

    The Russian Gazprom proposal to extend gas transit through Ukrainian territory is unacceptable, the Ukraine Minister of Energy Alexey Orzhel has said. According to him, Kiev is not satisfied with the the Moscow conditions that mutual judicial claims be rejected and that an agreement for only one year should. He pointed the need for compromises. At the same time, Naftogaz reported that the proposal of the Russian corporation will be discussed in the course of a new round of tripartite consultations. According to experts, the lack of mutual understanding between the parties could lead to the fact that in January 2020 the transportation of blue fuel through Ukraine will cease.

    The proposal made by Gazprom to extend the existing gas transit contract or to conclude a new agreement is unacceptable to the Ukrainian side. This was announced on the air during the ICTV channel programme “Freedom of Speech” by the Ukraine Minister of Energy Oleksiy Orzhel.

    According to him, the Russian corporation and Naftogaz Ukrainy should reach some kind of consensus on some form of extension of the current transit contract, which expires on December 31.

    “If we accept in some form our requirements for arbitration, if we sign a long-term contract, we can seek compromises. I hope that Gazprom can make the same compromise, the head of the Ukrainian Ministry of Energy explained.

    In turn, the executive director of Naftogaz Yuri Vitrenko pointed out the need to continue tripartite negotiations with the participation of the European Commission.

    “We will also discuss the latest proposal of Gazprom transparently in a trilateral format with our European partners in order to ensure fair European conditions for the continuation of transit,” he said.

    According to him, Kiev is working out a possible scenario for stopping the transportation of blue fuel through the country. In this case, Naftogaz intends to seek compensation from Gazprom in the amount of $ 11.8 billion plus interest.

    [Well, the EC has told them what to do!]

    The day before, the Russian corporation sent an official proposal to Ukrainian partners to extend the current agreement or conclude a new contract on gas transit through Ukraine for a period of one year. At the same time, a prerequisite for the continuation of transit is the mutual rejection of claims by the parties in the courts and antitrust authorities. So, from the Ukrainian side we are talking about the claims of Naftogaz to Gazprom for a total of $ 22 billion.

    In addition, Moscow expects Kiev’s decision regarding direct purchases of blue fuel from 2020, in this issue the Ukrainian side can count on a 25% discount.

    “Ukraine wants to regulate this according to Ukrainian laws – please, we are ready. Ukraine wants to regulate according to European laws, it has committed to adopt European legislation – we are ready, please, ”said Russian President Vladimir Putin on November 14.

    The last round of trilateral consultations in the Russia-European Union-Ukraine format was held on October 28 in Brussels. Following its results, Minister of Energy of the Russian Federation Alexander Novak said that all participants are set to continue the transit of Russian gas through Ukrainian territory after 2020. However, the deputy head of the European Commission Marosh Shefchovich expressed disappointment with the outcome of the negotiations and urged not to delay reaching agreements.

    As the leading expert of the National Energy Security Fund, an expert at the Financial University under the Government of Russia, Stanislav Mitrakhovich, has noted, the Ukrainian side is aiming at concluding a new transit agreement for several years, which stipulates pumping about 60 billion cubic metres of gas, but such conditions are unacceptable for Russia.

    “Bypass pipelines are being built, and such large volumes of pumping through the Ukraine are simply not needed. Moreover, we do not have a clear understanding that in future, relations with the Ukraine will be built in a constructive manner. Rather, we have concerns that relations will be difficult in the coming years. If there is no progress during the negotiations, then the scenario of the next gas war may await us”, the source said.

    In the Ukraine, they believe that they have the opportunity to confirm their claims to Gazprom and will be able to recover billions of dollars in claims, said Deputy General Director of the National Energy Security Fund Alexey Grivach.

    “But any reasonable person understands that in order to build mutually beneficial long-term relationships and somehow get out of this clinch, the issue of mutual judicial claims, which take homeric forms, should be removed from the agenda. So far they have said that they cannot react because there is no formal proposal. Here it is”, he said on Sputnik Radio.

    In short, the Yukies want money off Russia for just being there as a transit route.

    Well there soon no longer will be such a route, so fuck off!

    Like

    1. Let’s not forget the role of American busybody Richard Grenell in all of this, who is suspected of having bolstered Kuh-yiv to let the gas talks fail because America is going to ride to the rescue on its white charger, and stop Nord Stream II dead just in time for the Rooskies to desperately need the Ukrainian GTS. It will be too funny for words if that’s true, and he convinced Zik-Zik and his merry men only to have the gas talks collapse and Nord Stream II be finished and the Ukrainians to be left holding the bag. Kiev not only wants guaranteed transit volumes similar to what it experienced during peak transit, it also expects Russia to pay out billions in fines and compensation. And they have convinced themselves these riches are no more than what they deserve, for being Ukrainian.

      Like

      1. They weren’t even making way under their own power!

        Looks like they were towed by Russian Coast Guard vessels.

        Two gunboats and a tug, each under tow.

        I cannot imagine that they were towed all the way back to Odessa, though, and if not, then who filled their fuel bunkers?

        Like

  29. al-Beeb s’Allah: Russia corruption: Putin’s pet space project Vostochny tainted by massive theft
    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50462431

    By Laurence Peter

    Russia’s new Vostochny space centre has lost at least 11bn roubles (£133m; $172m) through theft and top officials have been jailed.

    So what went wrong with President Vladimir Putin’s pet project?

    Russia’s Federal Investigative Committee (SK) says it is handling 12 more criminal cases linked to theft in this mega-project, which Mr Putin sees as a strategic priority for Russia, because of its huge commercial potential…

    …Prof Mark Galeotti, a Russia expert at the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), told the BBC the Vostochny scandal highlighted the scale of corruption in Mr Putin’s huge state bureaucracy.

    “How can you deal with it without declaring war on your own elite? He’s not prepared to do that. This dependency on mega-projects almost invariably creates massive opportunities for embezzlement,” Mr Galeotti said…
    ####

    Is it a write(!) of passage for every BBC journalist to write such bitchy, semi-tabloid pieces? I just wonder. And what would we do without Professor Mark ‘Gerasimov’ Galeotti, Rent-a-Quote man.

    Like

  30. Naftogaz now claims that the EC recommendation that Kiev return to direct gas purchase off the Orcs is fake news:

    The European Commission has recommended that Gazprom:
    a) conclude a long-term contract
    b) by a considerable amount
    c) according to European rules and
    d) with the new Ukrainian GTS operator,

    because it is in line with the commercial interests of all parties and ensures Europe’s energy security. It’s true.

    But these attempts by the Russian state media to convince someone that the EU supports Russia’s desire to get a contract through political pressure are not true. It seems that in the USSR, TASS mandated statements were more elegant)

    Fake: BRUSSELS, November 19. / TASS /. The European Commission recommended that Ukraine purchase gas from Russia directly to an amount of about 15 billion cubic metres per year, reducing expensive reverse supplies. A source at EU institutions close to the tripartite gas talks said on Tuesday, TASS.

    UPD. Anticipating the following revelations of the TASS source in Brussels: they also do not support Gazprom’s aspirations through political blackmail to avoid enforcing a lawful arbitration in Stockholm.

    Be careful, check the information and its sources. This will be many in the coming months.

    We shall see, arsehole!

    Like

  31. Al-Beeb s’Allah GONAD (God’s Own News Agency Direct): Julian Assange: Sweden drops rape investigation
    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50473792

    …”The reason for this decision is that the evidence has weakened considerably due to the long period of time that has elapsed since the events in question.”..
    ####

    WtAF? Timing, timing, timing! Stockholm fully passing off the hot-potato to whomever becomes the UK’s next PM.

    Like

    1. The statute of limitations on the rage charges against Julian Assange in Sweden ends in August next year so whoever wins the general election in Britain next month needs to get cracking soon after to convince the Swedish prosecutor general to reopen the case against Assange.

      Like

  32. Craig Murray: The Roger Stone – Wikileaks – Russia Hoax
    https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2019/11/the-roger-stone-wikileaks-russia-hoax/

    As ever, the Guardian wins the prize for the most tendentious reporting of Roger Stone’s conviction. This is not quite on the scale of its massive front page lie that Paul Manafort visited Julian Assange in the Ecuadorean Embassy. But it is a lie with precisely the same intent, to deceive the public into believing there were links between Wikileaks and the Trump campaign. There were no such links…

    …It is worth noting that not one of those convicted of charges arising from or in connection with the Mueller investigation – Manafort, Papadopolous, Stone – has been convicted of anything to do with Wikileaks, with anything to do with Russia or with the original thesis of the enquiry. ..
    ####

    More at the link including a full transcript of Craig’s previously published audio interview with Randy Credico whom Stone claimed was his Wikileaks conduit…

    As for when the Groaning Man will stop lying, place your bets, though with the British media’s lack of interest in the congenital lying of the UK’s current prime minister, maybe never. The joys of the Old Boy’s Network is that you are given the benefit of the doubt except in the most egregious of cases where the fall out cannot be contained. There’s nothing to see, sail on!

    Like

    1. Yes, I read something in the paper today about the Democrats demanding a review of the written testimony Trump provided to the Mueller Investigation, with the allegation that Trump lied to the investigators. The immediate extrapolation is that Trump may have lied about the connections his campaign had to the Russians. There’s beating a dead horse, and then there’s the Democrat’s technique for beating a dead horse until no equine trace remains. Under no circumstances can voters go to the polls unconvinced that Trump was put in power by Russia.

      Say, did anyone see Royal Prince Andy’s interview, which was supposed to put to rest any suspicions that he had had sex with a 17-year-old procured for the purpose by Epstein? His story was that he couldn’t possibly have done that, because on the date it was supposed to have happened he was in fact at the Pizza Express in Woking having dinner with his daughter, a fact he now remembers with crystal clarity 18 years later because it was ‘very unusual, very, very unusual’ for him to go to Pizza Express. The papers are afire with what a disaster the interview was for him, and suggestions that he may have to formally bow out of the Royal Succession to avoid further damage to the monarchy. His charities and projects are quitting him in droves.

      Like

      1. I believe Prince Andy Panky is 8th in succession to the throne and something really quite unfortunate would have to happen to Prince Charles, his sons Princes William and Harry and their children before Prince Andrew’s chances of succeeding to the throne became real. I would think that after the Queen dies, her successor is likely to redefine the Royal Family as including just himself, his wife, his sons, their wives and the grandchildren, and Prince Andrew and his descendants will no longer be part of it.
        Prince Andrew ceased to be a roving trade ambassador some years ago, possibly due to his connections to a group of Kazakhstan-based businessmen who raised the money to buy his old Summerhill residence in suspicious circumstances. One of these businessmen, Ruslan Tsarnay, happens to be the uncle of the two men accused of planting and detonating the bombs at the Boston Marathon in 2013.

        Like

        1. Yes, I did not mean to suggest his accession to the throne is imminent. But if you’re a Prince who can never be King…what’s the good of yer? The interview was apparently a disaster, and several sources suggest the damage to his image is terminal.

          The comical pizza evasion was but one of several clangers he dropped; he also claimed that while he had of course noticed young girls hanging about Epstein’s place, he “didn’t want to sound grand or anything, but had always assumed they were part of the staff”. He completely came off a spoiled rich prick – which, of course, he is – and the Royals will want to get shut of him as quickly and decisively as may be effected.

          Like

          1. His mum gave Andrew, Duke of York, the old heave-ho yesterday: he has been ordered by the head of “The Firm” to withdraw from “public duties” , i.e. waving and grinning at monarchist dickheads, and has been stripped of his £249, 000 “salary”. See Daily Mail

            Also in that frightful rag, which supported Hitler right up until the UK declared war against Nazi Germany in 1939, there is this analysis of the twat’s life style that he has led since leaving the Royal Navy in 2001:

            Downfall of the Queen’s ‘favourite:
            Prince Andrew was a national hero and the apple of his mother’s eye, but greed, arrogance and jealousy have proved to be his undoing,

            wherein one can read the following:

            The tragedy of Prince Andrew is that he could have been a royal life-long hero. After all he piloted a helicopter with great courage during the Falklands War luring Argentine Exocet missiles away from British ships.

            Yes, after all …

            I have often questioned this claim. Granted, I know nothing about Exocet missiles, but can one really be lured away from its big, fat juicy aircraft carrier target by a helicopter hovering around some distance away?

            A far as I recall, with Thatcher’s task force sent to the Falklands were two, I think, container ships loaded up high with containers, whose purpose was to do just that which Dickhead Andy is said to have done.

            Now I can quite imagine an Exocet zeroing in on a huge container ship that is in the vicinity of other surface vessels, but an airborne RN helicopter?

            Like

            1. The Exocets which struck British ships were all launched by aircraft; the Super Etendard, to be exact. Consequently they were typically launched at less than their maximum range, a sacrifice made for more precise targeting. This would have been the AM-39, range about 50 miles. The missile is subsonic, but still pretty fast, so the time of flight from a launch, say, 40 miles away would only be about 3 minutes. The plane pops up to get a radar picture, and is likely receiving third-party targeting information also from other assets to determine ship disposition. The pilot launches the missile/s with targeting information which tells it to fly toward a target which is x miles away on a bearing of xxx. The missile flies a sea-skimming profile in that direction, and when the information input at launch tells it it is less than about 8 miles from the intended target, the active homer switches on. This is probably the moment when the ship is aware that a missile is approaching, unless they were lucky enough to see the launch on radar and follow the missile all the way in. Usually not; it’s pretty small. Anyway, when the terminal homer switches on it is less than a minute from impact.

              A helicopter hovering just above sea level could possibly take a missile instead of the carrier getting hit, but it would have to know from exactly what direction the attack was coming and be right in its path, as it would not have time to reposition. It would have to fly at a level no higher than the superstructure of the carrier, all day, I suppose in more or less of a hover, as a helicopter typically cannot fly in level flight at the economical speed of a British aircraft carrier, which would be maybe 15-18 knots.

              A helicopter so despatched would not survive. The author is trying to get you to believe that fat entitled git would deliberately put himself in the way of a missile which would kill him, since any missile ‘lured away from the carrier’ would hit the helicopter. Obviously he was not a very successful lure, because he’s still undead. It’s been a long time, but I believe the wartime Exocet search pattern was in/out, left/right, which is to say if a circle is divided into four quadrants, the first place the seeker is looking is the bottom left quadrant. That’s where you want to have your false target, relative to the missile’s flight path, in order to introduce something that will fool it. The chance of positioning a helicopter so it would be a more attractive target than a ship many times its size is about nil decimal shit.

              Knowing what we now know about the heroic nature of the individual concerned, I would suggest the accolade is just more fluff to burnish his ‘combat experience’. Kudos to him for learning to fly a helicopter, I’m sure it isn’t easy, but I think that was likely the extent of his accomplishment. I should have cut off his head when I had the chance.

              Greed, arrogance and jealousy had little effect on his undoing, which was brought about by porking underage girls and then telling the most obvious porkies to extricate himself. I would buy arrogance, a little bit, to the extent he is so arrogant he assumed on his own hook that he could do an interview, and his brilliant dodging would prove too artful for the clods watching to realize they were being diddled. As if having a member of the Royals visit Pizza Express and actually stay for a sit-down meal would not be such an occasion for a pizza joint that they would bother to take a picture, or keep some sort of record on the Royal Visit. If I were questioning him, and he said it was very, very unusual for him to visit the Pizza Express in Woking, I’d have asked him, was that the only time? If he had said “No”, he would be fucked, because the next question would be, when were all the other times? He just said he remembered because it was unusual.

              On a similar note, today’s paper named Epstein’s guards, and said they were shopping online and sleeping when they were supposed to be doing rounds which would have included his cell. They then forged the log to pretend they were carrying out their duties as ordered. The same article was careful to add that nobody was seen on surveillance cameras which covered the area in front of his cell, so the notion that some assassin crept in and killed him is just a silly conspiracy theory. I’m pretty sure we all know how easy it would be to provide surveillance camera footage showing nothing happening, and rig the timestamp. Or just use simultaneous footage from somewhere else. How the hell would we know where the front of Epstein’s cell was? We only have the word of known and proven liars.

              Like

            2. One reader of the above article comments, following another reader’s querying why the Duke of York is a “national hero”:

              It’s to do with the Falklands. He basically flew a helicopter delivering bread and mail and was kept very safe indeed. Also a very unpopular RN officer amongst his peers. Definitely never shot at.

              My cousin Joe, a Chief Petty Officer in the RN, told me that years ago, namely that Sub Lieutenant Prince Andrew was an objectionably conceited royal cnut.

              A story went the rounds about when he first reported for duty on board an RN warship: he went straight up to the captain and said: “Hi! I’m Prince Andrew, but you may call me ‘Andy'”, whereupon he received the reply: “Good morning! I’m the captain of this ship. You call me ‘Sir’!”


              Ah, those were the days (above)! Two stupid cnuts with a beautiful one in the middle. Photographed in 2000.

              Like

    1. Jesus, what a world.

      Hey, on that note, check out what the Heathen Chinee have been up to: GPS jamming so sophisticated that it is ‘like magic’ to the preeminent American GPS expert. God help us all if the shiftless, amusing but calculating Chinese ever become as mindlessly savage as their partners, the Godless Russians.

      “This was the first time that C4ADS had heard of widespread maritime spoofing not obviously linked to the Russians. A few months earlier, the organization had published a report that detailed how Russia used GPS jamming in the Crimea, the Black Sea, Syria, Norway, and Finland. It also contained evidence that a Russian mobile electronic warfare team had been disrupting GPS signals during President Putin’s public appearances.”

      https://www.technologyreview.com/s/614689/ghost-ships-crop-circles-and-soft-gold-a-gps-mystery-in-shanghai/?utm_source=pocket-newtab

      King of Technology America is in a war against peasant clods who don’t make anything…except when they make something so amazing they must be in league with the devil. Maybe AIS spoofing explains those American destroyers that clumsily run into merchant shipping and cause embarrassing international incidents! American warships refuse to use AIS because their ghostly unpresence is always super-secret and that mystery is much more important than safe navigation – but perhaps the merchant shipping with whom they became entangled were being tricked by the evil Chinee (Fu-Manchu mustaches mandatory).

      Get it? When the United States comes up with it, it’s a stroke of genius which calls for terminal smugness, and the USA will use it as it sees fit because it is all about freedom and democracy – and security – for all. When Russia or China develops it, its a pact with Satan because they are genetically too stupid and warped to have come up with anything clever on their own.

      Like

      1. Mark…you and I both know that
        sooner or later the Chinks and the commie rats in the Kremlin
        will get into a huge battle and nuke each other, thus leaving the (remaining) world safe for
        freedom and prosperity to thrive under America’s guiding light.
        USA. USA!!!!

        Like

      2. Mark…you and I both know that
        sooner or later the Chinks and the commie rats in the Kremlin
        will get into a huge battle and nuke each other, thus leaving the (remaining) world safe for
        freedom and prosperity to thrive under America’s guiding light.
        USA. USA!!!!

        Like

    1. The reaction of the American mass media is a guilty, shame-faced silence. The events in Iraq are a stark expression of the abject criminality and failure of the entire US imperialist project in that country, so the less said about them the better.

      Ha, ha! Dream on. Corporate America is not ashamed of itself for anything, because there is no such thing as failure. Something which might appear to be a failure to the unschooled is simply another kind of success, or would have been a brilliant success by any measure were it not for the base, ignorant peasants who spurn the priceless gift of freedom bestowed upon them by America.

      Too right, though, that had this revolt been taking place in Russia or China, it would receive Breaking News coverage, and breathless analysis from morning to night.

      The best way to never feel troubled by the promises you made is to not remember them.

      Like

  33. Sounds like a worthwhile film…hope it gets a USA release date soon!!
    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/11/19/jacc-n19.html

    “The film follows events through the 1898 trial of Zola for defamation and Picquart’s testimony at the 1899 re-trial—where the army, trying to calm mounting public outrage by reducing Dreyfus’s sentence but without admitting to wrongdoing, arranged for the ludicrous and contemptible verdict of “guilty of high treason with attenuating circumstances.” Dreyfus was cleared in 1906, though the French army did not ultimately admit to having framed Dreyfus until 1995.”

    “This does not, however, detract from what the film has accomplished: bringing the Dreyfus Affair vividly and powerfully to life. This is a film that should and must be seen by people around the world, especially amid a new resurgence of neo-fascistic parties and officials across Europe and internationally—from the fascistic rantings of the American president to the attempts in the German media to revise the history of Nazism in order to revive German militarism”

    Like

    1. Pendejo puta has indigenous blood
      So she is a traitor to her people.
      Real white Aryan Nazis would gas her ass as untermensch.

      Like

      1. These coup folks have a very distinct christian/Vatican bent. They were quite open about purging Bolivia of non-Christian (read Catholic) influences.

        Greatly under reported, the Vatican has enormous resources at its disposal in its multi-century old global empire to advance its interests as well as those of its allies. Some of the Nazi ferocity on the Eastern Front in WW II was a modern expression of the Vatican crusades against the Orthodox East. The Polish Pope was essential in the Polish rebellion as Pope Pius was essential in the genocide of Serbs, Jews and Roma in WW II Yugoslavia. Just saying.

        Like

        1. One of the coup leaders, Luis Fernando Camacho, may have supported an attempted assassination and putsch against Evo Morales back in 2009. The assassins included a former journalist, Eduardo Rozsa Flores, of Hungarian – local Bolivian ancestry, who was once a fervent Roman Catholic / Opus Dei member and then later converted to Islam. (To complicate things further, his father had Jewish ancestry.) An elite police unit in Bolivia uncovered the plot and shot at least three assassins including Rozsa Flores. Rozsa Flores had spent time in Croatia in the early 1990s where he led a Croatian paramilitary organisation, possibly with Ustasha associations.

          Camacho himself is linked to Croatian-Bolivian businessman Branko Marinkovic who also supported that assassination plot and whose parents were rumoured to be linked to the Ustasha in the 1940s.

          https://thegrayzone.com/2019/11/11/bolivia-coup-fascist-foreign-support-fernando-camacho/

          Other conservative Christian denominations, some even antagonistic to the Roman Catholic Church, may be active in the political opposition against Morales as well. Pentecostalism in particular seems to be a big thing in Latin America at present. In Brazil, President Bolsonaro draws a lot of support from Pentecostal and other evangelical Protestant churches.
          https://www.vox.com/mischiefs-of-faction/2018/10/8/17950304/pentecostals-bolsonaro-brazil

          Like

          1. Jesus Christ, what a stinking swamp filled with the usual human scum. I can’t say I am surprised but having the facts mean so much more. Thanks for the insight and research that turns suspicion into reality. Great work.

            Ya know, we Westerners like to feel smug/superior relative to Muslims, non-whites, etc. as we are so much more civilized and humane. However, I have come to the conclusion that Western Christianity has morphed over the centuries into a damaging and repressive organization second only in its harm to humanity to the financial/atheistic/narcissistic elites to whom they serve.

            Like

          2. Even wiki, which usually follows the party line, is critical of Camacho. Just one quote:

            Panama Papers[edit]
            Camacho has been identified in the Panama Papers as an officer who helped businesses and individuals move financial assets offshore, to construct schemes to avoid tax evasion, and to launder money. He has been revealed as a shareholder of Panamian company Navi International Holding S.A.[36][37]

            Like

  34. ….the Warsaw Pact was formed in 1955, six years after NATO, and owed its formation to a perception that the allied countries were organizing against the Soviet Union. I don’t know where they would ever have gotten such a crazy idea.

    Yes, where did the Soviet Union/Russia get that crazy idea? Really. Hard to figure.

    That scab of civilization called Western Europe needs to hurry along to its historical destiny of irrelevancy.

    Like

    1. I stand corrected, the air strike was intensive although the degree of success is unclear.

      https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201911201077354913-idf-confirms-its-fighter-jets-attacked-dozens-of-military-targets-in-syria/

      Late on Tuesday, Syria state-run broadcaster Al-Ikhbariya said that the nation’s air defence systems had repelled an air assault on Damascus and its suburbs, adding that several missiles were downed south of Damascus.

      Syrian state-run news agency SANA clarified that missiles were fired by Israeli jets from Golan Heights and Marj al-Ayoun and added that the air defences were able to destroy most of the missiles before they reached their targets.

      Like

  35. Putin’s Russia!

    Just thought I should post the above as typical of kreakl postings to the Russian blogosphere and intended to show how awful this country is.

    The picture shows a stark contrast, that’s true.

    The derelict house is the last house in what was the village of Matveyovskoe, which is situated right on the southwestern fringe of Moscow city limits, which are steadily creeping outwards into the vastness of Russia, which vast territory, remember, lies beyond Moscow and is populated by folk living in abject poverty and almost permanent alcohol induced stupefaction, but whom gullible Western tourists are never allowed to see.

    Here are some other views of the Matveyovskoe district:

    What a shithole!


    The village street!

    I bet someone still lives there — probably some old ratbag of a babushka, which species are becoming more and more my sworn enemies here because they think I am a dyedushka, but I’m not!

    The fact that they know I have a much younger wife is what probly bugs the old dears.

    🙂

    Like

  36. Antiwar.com: Bolivia Deploys Armored Vehicles as Tensions Escalate
    https://news.antiwar.com/2019/11/19/bolivian-deploys-armored-vehicles-as-tensions-escalate/

    Police fire tear gas as coca farmers protest interim government

    Bolivian police and military are out in force Tuesday, with armored vehicles deployed to advance on the major Senkata gasoline plant near the city of La Paz. The plant had been under blockade by protesters.

    Protesters had burned tires to prevent access to the plant, though the military managed to end the blockade of what is left of the site, killing three protesters with live ammunition and wounding 30 others in clashes..
    ####

    Taking a leaf out of the Vietnam ‘We have to destroy it to save it’?

    Like

    1. How can Bolivia simultaneously be ‘the poorest country in South America’ and have had the hottest economy in the region five years running (as of the date of that report)?

      Might it have something to do with it having a quarter the population of Colombia, less than two-thirds the population of Ecuador? It kind of looks as if they’re not telling the whole story. But all the west wants to listen to is that simpleminded protestor bellowing “The town is hungry! The town wants bread!” In a country with less than 4% unemployment.

      Like

  37. The smear campaign by Dems against journalist John Solomon continues:

    Propublica: How a Veteran Reporter Worked with Giuliani’s Associates to Launch the Ukraine Conspiracy
    https://www.propublica.org/article/how-a-veteran-reporter-worked-with-giuliani-associates-to-launch-the-ukraine-conspiracy

    ####

    Even then, you notice how careful the piece is. They are not accusing Solomon of fabricating or manipulating his work, but that he has worked for conservative news outlets and that people he has ‘worked’ with have ‘links’ or are somehow ‘unsavory’, hence the Lev Parnas angle who is a) foreign; b) indicted; c) willing to roll over. Guilt by association in free America!

    Here’s the section quoted at the end that it was claimed that Lutsko ‘wrote the list’ and not ambassador Yovanovic:

    https://thebabel.net/texts/28898-genprokuror-yuriy-lucenko-ne-idet-v-otstavku-vot-chto-on-rasskazal-nam-o-konfliktah-s-poslom-ssha-i-glavoy-nabu-dele-burisma-plenkah-rozenblata-i-istochnikah-korrupcii-bolshoe-intervyu

    Кого она назвала? Кто был в ее списке?

    Встреча [с послом] была в ГПУ, за этим столом Интервью записывалось в кабинете генерального прокурора. в январе 2017 года. Она проходила не один на один. Она была не одна, и я был не один. Госпожу Йованович интересовало дело [бывшего заместителя генпрокурора] Виталия Касько [которого прокуратура Киева подозревала в мошенничестве при приватизации жилья]. Дело в том, что господин Касько прописал в служебной квартире маму, которая никогда не выезжала из Львова, — в этом были признаки злоупотребления. В январе 2017 года прокуратура Киева закрыла дело против Касько «за недостаточностью доказательств».

    По ее словам, Касько являлся выдающимся антикоррупционным деятелем, а уголовное дело [против него] дискредитировало антикоррупционеров. Я изложил детали [дела] и объяснил, что не могу открывать и закрывать производства по своему желанию. Назвал еще ряд так называемых антикоррупционеров, проходящих по делам. Она сказала, что это недопустимо, мол, подорвет доверие к антикоррупционным активистам. Я взял листочек, записал озвученные фамилии и говорю: «Диктуйте список неприкосновенных персон». Она говорит: «Нет, вы меня неправильно поняли». Я говорю: «Нет, я вас правильно понял; раньше такие списки писали [в Администрации президента] на Банковой, а вы предлагаете новые списки от Танковой На улице И. Сикорского (бывшая Танковая) в Киеве находится посольство США в Украине.». Встреча закончилась. Боюсь, эмоции были не очень хорошие.

    I took a piece of paper, wrote down the names and said: “Dictate the list of inviolable persons.” She says, ” No, you misunderstood me.” I say: “No, I understand you correctly; previously, such lists were written [in the presidential Administration] on Bankovoi street, and you offer new lists from the Tankovoi on I. Sikorsky (former Tank) street in Kiev where the US Embassy in Ukraine is.” The meeting was over. I’m afraid the emotions weren’t very good.

    ####

    The machine translation does not support the pat english translation in the ProPublica piece. From what I gather from above, Yovanovic was trying to meddle in which anti-corruption judge was fired and who was not. He clearly referred to lists already sent from the US Embassy.

    Note that this is a single ukrainian language source and a single English language one is also offered. Soloman did not base his reporting so thinly and would have checked with other sources.

    Like

  38. FSB WWII Archives: Estonian Goon Squads Murdered 17,000 Russians, Burned Their Bodies!

    19 Nov 2019

    Vesti News

    The FSB Directorate for Pskov Oblast has declassified data on Estonian hit squads’ atrocities toward helpless civilians during the Great Patriotic War. The investigation began back in 1967, but for some reason, it never concluded. This week, the FSB Directorate for Pskov disclosed rare documents for the first time. The archives concealed dreadful data.

    Like

    1. В Кремле ответили на территориальные претензии Эстонии
      12:39 20.11.2019 (обновлено: 19:12 20.11.2019)

      The Kremlin replies to Estonian territorial claim
      MOSCOW, 20 Nov — RIA Novosti. The statements of the speaker of the Estonian Parliament Henn Põlluaas that Russia needs to return to the republic “annexed territory”, is considered by by the Kremlin to be unacceptable, said Dmitry Peskov.

      As the press Secretary of the Russian President has said: Moscow could not accept such claims.

      Yesterday, Põlluaas said that Russia was obliged to return Estonian territory. The politician made his during an RIA Novosti interview with the director of the Second European Department of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Sergei Belyaev, in which the diplomat said that the Tartu Peace Treaty had long ceased to be valid, but Tallinn refers to it when discussing the ratification of the border treaty and makes territorial claims against Moscow.

      According to the speaker of the Estonian Parliament, progress in the approval of the border Treaty can be achieved only when Moscow recognize the Tartu Treaty and the borders of the Baltic republics in accordance with it.

      According to the Tartu treaty, signed by Soviet Russia and Estonia in 1920, part of the Leningrad and Pskov regions were given to the Baltic republic. In 1944, these territories were returned to the RSFSR. Moscow considers the treaty as a historical document that has no legal force.

      Tallinn, however, thinks differently. References to the treaty were included in the preamble of the law on ratification of the Russian-Estonian border agreement. Moscow regarded this as an opportunity to present territorial claims to it in the future and revoked the signature of the document.

      Like

      1. Do you suppose Estonia is having its strings pulled to agitate for some kind of military response – or threat of one – against it? So that the western press can scream that Putin is making a lunge for the Baltics, just as western think-tankers always said he would?

        Like

        1. What a preposterous idea! Such underhandedness is typical of the Russian way of doing things and certainly not that of the West, which is on the side of freedom and democracy and the greater good …

          Like

  39. Euractiv: Amid NATO tensions, Estonian President highlights Russia risk
    https://www.euractiv.com/section/defence-policy/news/amid-nato-tensions-estonian-president-highlights-russia-risk/

    ####

    In short, we should be able to do anything we like without consequence. The EU’s ‘ever expanding union’ with the backing of NATO is good for everyone. When we bite off more than we can chew it’s not our fault. We can’t help it. Nobody is supposed to resist us. As for NATO protecting ‘liberal U-rope’, I can be forgiven in pointing out that quite a few see neither Poland nor Hungary as ‘Liberal’.

    I do recognize that she’s spouting the expected phrases and unity bollox to softball questions, but you wonder if such people do have any real awareness of the consequences of their own actions rather than ‘I’m a club with lots of big boys who will protect me whatever I do’. Least of all the numerous cases of the United States singularly failing to back up their so-called ‘allies’ because it wasn’t worth the political, economic or military cost. This really is unicorns farting rainbows.

    Like

  40. More of that stellar fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants ‘Art of the Deal’ from Preznit Trump, as he arbitrarily quadruples the amount South Korea will have to pay to keep US troops based in the country. Where I imagine they are many different kinds of popular, just as they are in Okinawa. The Pentagon’s defense of jacking the fees is that South Korea can afford it – nothing more complicated than that, and so Trumpian that it must have come from him. Unsurprisingly, South Korea is dismayed and the talks fall apart.

    https://news.antiwar.com/2019/11/19/us-breaks-off-talks-as-south-korea-balks-at-5-billion-demand/

    Like

  41. Being the poorest country in South America and having the hottest economy in the continent all at once is possible if that growth started from a very low base. Growth rates are obtained by measuring the entire value of all economic transactions in the country in a given period (usually a calendar year or the country’s financial year), and comparing that value to its equivalent in the previous period and noting the change using the previous period’s value as the base for comparison.

    Bolivia’s economy has always been dependent on mining (mainly silver and tin, in the past; natural gas and other minerals, more recently) and until Morales came along, this industry has mainly benefited the country’s political elites and foreign mining companies who own the mines and determine if the raw minerals are then just sent out of the country or stay for further refinement and processing. The Morales government was keen for further refinement of raw commodities within Bolivia’s borders, with the goal being that end products for the minerals also be manufactured in Bolivia: this would imply that in addition to mining, say, lithium, the country would eventually be making lithium batteries and the objects and products that the batteries go into.

    Like

      1. Don’t know about that but she, for some reason, detests the British Empire and equates them with the Vatican Empire. Imagine that.

        Like

          1. I thought she had a nice voice and a real talent, and when she still had hair she was quite attractive.

            Overall, though, she seemed to me to be a fairly unremarkable person who wanted to be remarkable, and took extreme positions in order to be noticed and remarked. It’s possible she truly believes in all the positions she has taken, but she always seemed a little too much of a revolutionary to be advocating for peace. Anyway, good luck to ‘er. We all have to get old, and perhaps if you grow dotty in your dotage, it helps.

            Like

            1. She had a horrid childhood if this video is accurate (its quite disturbing):

              If we were to truly see the world without the numbing filters pounded into our brain starting at the moment of birth, we would all flee in whatever way we could (becoming batty for example) from this civilization controlled by lunatics and worse. Really.

              Like

              1. I have heard that Sinead O’Connor may have a borderline personality disorder. One characteristic of this condition is that sufferers resort to manipulative behaviour (which can include making suicidal threats and even harming themselves) to get attention. The condition does arise in people who come from dysfunctional and unstable families where a parent has been abusive or given love and security on highly conditional terms. Sinead O’Connor’s mother was known to be an emotionally abusive woman. How much though of Sinead O’Connor’s behaviour and actions can be blamed on her parents, and how much she should be responsible for (and the media may be of no help in both egging her on and then slapping her in the face when she does do extreme or outlandish things in response to the encouragement), is difficult to know.

                This exchange between Sinead O’Connor and her brother Joseph (he is a novelist) in The Irish Times in 1993 might give readers an idea of how much Sinead O’Connor may or may not be aware that in many ways she is her own worst enemy:

                http://www.members.tripod.com/dcebe/poem02.txt (Joseph’s response to a poem Sinead wrote)

                http://www.members.tripod.com/dcebe/poem03.txt (Sinead’s response to Joseph’s response)

                Like

                1. Sometimes, people see more than they can process/recast/reinterpret into something socially acceptable. As I am wont to say, we exist in an infinite universe with infinite complexity with things beyond knowability but nevertheless influencing our awareness. And that, IMHO, is why narcissism and ego are the blinding scourge of humanity. Echoes of this blindness appear in the form of capitalism, ego worship, racism, judgement absent of compassion, etc. Just a hunch.

                  Like

  42. You mean those foreigners who, she maintains, attempted genocide against the Irish nation, sort of like Svidomites maintain that the invading Orcs from the East attempted genocide against the so-called Ukrainian nation?

    If head-banger O’Connor really knew her Irish history, she would understand that rather a large number of those in the Pantheon of Irish Nationalist heroes were Anglo-Irish/Scots-Irish Protestants, descendants of those “foreigners” who had become Hiberniores Hibernis ipsis.

    Like

    1. This translated version of the song in question represents my knowledge on the topic:

      If this song is not about foreign invaders seizing land then I stand corrected. As to its historical accuracy, I have no idea.

      Like

    1. Or, like most (including Wellington) when it suits “being born in a stable doesn’t make you a beast.” Nowadays they prefer “West Brits” and all is just wonderful seeing how they have all the best land….

      Like

      1. On the other hand, one of the leaders of the United Irishmen and of the 1798 Irish Rebellion was former British army officer during the American Revolution and Anglo-Irish aristocrat Lord Edward Fitzgerald, who died as a result of a gunshot wound that he suffered whilst being arrested on a charge of treason.

        Like

  43. Banderite slag Rotaru back on tour in the Aggressor State.

    Sofia Rotaru is coming to be back in Mordor for the new Year festivities.

    She is 70 years old, by the way, but the make-up artists pile it on thick before she goes on stage.

    There have been a few muted protests about her performing here again. Rotaru has openly supported the “Anti-Terrorist Punishment Battalions” and the foul criminal swine Poroshenko, and once cut short a tour to the Aggressor State in protest over the wicked Orcs’ waging war against her beloved Banderastan.

    When Rotaru appears on stage here, she smiles her sweet smile at everyone and says how she loves them all and how good they are, but she gives money to the Bandera-Nazis. However, her agent here says she has decided to return to Russia for the New Year thrash because she “loves the Russian public and comes not for the money”.

    Fuck her off out of here!

    Like

    1. Sofia Rotaru has returned to Moscow to earn some dough
      19 Nov 2019

      You can get garbled English subtitles to the above, but it is mostly unintelligible: I don’t know why they bother.

      She’s going to rake in 3 million rubles for performing here — that’s about half-a-million US dollars.

      She’s going to perform in the “Songs of the Year” show on the Rossiya TV Channel 1 (Kremlin controlled, remember!) on 1st/2nd January 2020.

      All transport expenses for her and her roadies from Yukistan to here paid for.

      What a hard-faced bitch she is! What mugs are they who pay to see the old bag!

      Comment to the above from an irate Orc:

      Do not allow this reptile into Russia!

      Like

      1. Must be that her Banderite fans are too poor now to pay top hryvna to see her and if anything have taken to burning their old vinyl records for fuel.

        Like

        1. Украинский троян, или как София Ротару расколола российскую публику

          A Ukrainian Trojan Horse, or how Sofia Rotaru has caused a split in the Russian public

          What charges are being brought against Rotaru? She was once photographed with the Ukrainian flag. Why not? She is a citizen of the Ukraine and has the right to be photographed with the state flag. After all, no one is indignant when Russian stars are shot against a background of the Russian flag.

          Then Rotaru has been accused of providing financial assistance to the Ukrainian army. Well, why not? The Ukrainian army is poor, there are rusty ships in service, and military equipment has remained from the time of the Union. If the state is not able to provide its army with everything necessary, then small donations will not save it. Or maybe Sofia was simply forced to do this? Again, there is nothing criminal in this.

          But let’s be honestly: many of our people grew up on the songs of this artist, and love her work. Why all this hype is inflated is unclear. But it is obvious that in our country there are both opponents of Rotaru and her fans.

          It can be assumed that all this is done in terms of drawing attention to these tours, and this is such a kind of PR. Or maybe this news is trying to distract us from other more important problems?

          Or maybe Sofia was simply forced to do this? Again, there is nothing criminal in this.

          Really????

          Like

    1. This is definitely a major victory for the U.S., because it buys them time – time to introduce more dirty tricks and try to stop the completion of the pipeline completely. But that’s not the immediate goal, which is to pressure Russia into signing a long-term transit contract with Ukraine on terms very favourable to Ukraine. And Europe is sort of going along with it – except Germany – because if it doesn’t, it’ll be on the hook for the $2 or $3 Billion, whatever the real figure is, that the Ukies will lose in transit fees.

      But Russia is still not really in a bad position; not at all. As I have suggested before now, a little taste of panic would be just what the doctor ordered for Europe. Russia is under no obligation at all to transit gargantuan volumes across Ukraine to make up for what clearly, clearly is American meddling in its own self-interest. America wants to sell loads and loads of LNG to Europe, but the logistics at present are hopeless and if Europe even tries it, it is going to enter a gas shortage that will be simultaneously critical and obviously the fault of the Americans. Russia is obviously trying heroically to complete the pipeline, but Uncle Sam is stepping in to stop it without any capability to ease a gas crisis itself.

      An ideal solution, for Washington, would look like the Russians having to sign a further transit contract with Ukraine committing them to pump $2-3 Billion a year into Kuh-yiv’s coffers, while America works on refinements which would stop Russia completely from finishing the pipeline. At the same time, it would be ramping up its LNG-delivery capability astronomically, and steal Europe as a customer right out from under the Russians’ noses just about the time their gas-transit contract runs out. That’d be so boss, from the Washington point of view, because it would have the luxury of complete control over politics in Europe. Nobody could get elected with the knowledge that their success would piss off the supplier of Europe’s gas. At the same time, Washington would be practically coining its own money with the profits it would reap, billions and billions from Europe, and the option of exerting gentle pressure on Europe to commit to buying more American goods besides the commodities. Once locked into purchase agreements with the USA, Washington could manipulate Europe like a puppet.

      What is far more likely to happen is a rupture of the transatlantic accord. France is already pissed off with America, and although it would be child’s play to engineer the removal of Micron, his replacement would more than likely be a hard-right Euroskeptic, which would not be at all helpful. Germany’s aversion is building, not only because the USA is cheating it out of being the gas hub for Europe, but because Russia is Germany’s main source of domestic supplies. All of Europe will have to go short if Russia simply declines to sign a further gas agreement, and nobody could blame them (although Stoltenberg could be counted upon to try) because the cause is so clearly American meddling – they’re bragging about it.

      It’s also possible the ostensible delay is a ruse to buy Russia time to pull out the stops and get the line completed before Washington can react. But Russia still has options, as I say. Moscow could buy one of the pipe-laying ships and it is pretty hard to imagine Washington would actually have to clout to stop the sale – what are they, Emperors of the world and all that happens in it? Then the pipelayer would be Russian-flagged, and they could tell Washington to go fuck itself. Or Russia could simply decline to sign a further transit contract, pump to the maximum through existing pipelines other than Ukraine’s GTS, the price of gas would go through the ceiling, and Russia would still make money while underlining what the situation could have been like had Washington not intervened. The USA would doubtless be sailing LNG tankers as fast as it could, but that would only highlight its failure to keep up with demand.

      Bring it on, Washington!

      Like

    2. Well, when Lenta.ru says the launch will be delayed, what exactly does that mean? Does it mean that the ribbon-cutting ceremony is to be held off until mid-2020 so that Angela Merkel and her people have enough time to learn scuba-diving or work through their fears of being stuck together in a tiny submarine in order to attend the ceremony?

      There would be nothing to stop the gas from flowing through the pipelines now or in another three weeks. How would the US or the Danes or the Poles be able to check the pipelines and find out if there is any activity in them?

      Like

      1. The focus now seems to be on stopping Russia from laying the last few kilometers of piping on the seabed. Obviously no gas could flow through the pipeline now because there is a great gap in it. Which is why I suggest Russia might be pretending it is experiencing delays, so that the USA will relax a little and believe it does not have only weeks to stop the effort as Cruz reports, but rather considerable time. But it is also accurate that if the pipelaying vessels stop work and the builders have to shift to welding lengths on shore and using divers to install them, it will delay completion by months.

        I maintain that it does not matter. If I were in charge of the project, I would buy one of the pipelaying ships – the USA does not have plans to stop the pipeline which extend beyond that. But it is of little consequence – if the opening of the pipeline were delayed until winter is over and Europe had a hard-ass winter because Russia refused to commit to an extortionate contract to help Ukraine, that would not be a bad thing. It would be pretty damned hard to sell it as being Russia’s fault.

        More important than that, though, is that an American victory in this instance will signal that all major construction projects worldwide are subject to American approval. No approval, sanctions and then no project. I just hope Europe gets that.

        Like

        1. Banderastan announced yesterday that it is seeking ways to halt the Danish go-ahead announced the other week. Whom the shitwits are to appeal to over this issue, I know not, but they say the grounds of their appeal will be ecological.

          The Nord Stream 2 pipeline is all but ready. When the big turn-on will be, nobody yet knows.

          Only the other day, Russia announced that the two Turk-Stream lines had been filled with gas. These lines run from near Anapa to the Turkish Black Sea coast. The gas in these lines is not yet flowing as the transit structure is going through tests. However, there was sweet FA in the Western press about this, only that Nord Stream is not going to start by the end of this year.

          Like

          1. The gas in the Turkstream lines will be like liquid gold if (a) Nord Stream II is delayed until after this winter, and (b) a new transit agreement with Ukraine does not come about. The price of gas in Europe is going to go sky-high. Of course the Americans will have their snouts in the trough, too, but they simply cannot deliver a seamless supply of LNG to match the flow of pipeline gas. A full winter of paying through the nose for crazy-expensive gas is just what the Europeans need. The only thing that could fuck it up now would be for Moscow to sign on for another long-term contract with Ukraine, and it is that eventuality the USA is trying to force.

            The ecological assessment was a big part of the Danes’ analysis, and I doubt very much Zik-Zik’s razor-sharp ministers have discovered anything they have not already thought of. And they can’t retract their agreement after they have signed it – that’s why they took so long about it.

            Like

            1. Um, the Nord Stream II partners are still taking the EU to arbitration tribunal for changing their own rules to specifically exclude NS II, so highly illegal under EU law itself. If the pipeline isn’t fininshed and running, Brussels will have to pay out and those U-ropean partners will want their pound of flesh. That’s the equivalent of letting off a nuke. If the EU cannot respect its own rule of law and will shaft its own private business to make America happy, then it’s an even bigger joke than it is already.

              It’s effectively saying that Brussels cannot or will not protect private investors if it comes under pressure. The reason though is irrelevant, its the effect. Why would anyone trust Brussels and invest? I also don’t doubt that these companies are putting considerable pressure on their own states over this. I say there is little to worry about as it’s still early days.

              Like

              1. As well, European leaders who all came ’round to agreement on the pipeline – owing to pressure from other European leaders – knew full well of America’s objections from the first announcements of the pipeline’s construction. Those objections grew more strident as the USA developed into ‘the world’s energy export superpower’, which it now fancies itself due to frantic fracking and drilling, but they were always there and long before America wanted to replace Russian gas deliveries with its own freedom molecules, it wanted to replace them with deliveries of proxies under its control, like Qatar. At first pooh-poohing the idea that it objected to the pipeline because it wanted to sell gas to Europe itself, the USA gradually came around to coyly hinting that it might have just a smidge of self-interest, to the present full-throated shouting that by God, Europe should be buying from friends like the nice Americans instead of being held to ransom by the Godless Russian savages. Because Europe seemed not to be getting it.

                It is America that is not getting it. Europeans might be snooty and aloof and overbearing, but they’re not entirely stupid. If they thought for a moment that American gas deliveries could be simultaneously cost-competitive with Russian gas (not necessarily cheaper, but in the ball-park) and available for constant and seamless delivery, they’d be on it like Prince Andrew on a…well, you know. That they have granted such reluctant approval of Nord Stream II as they have is evidence that they have weighed the attractiveness of American LNG supply and found it wanting, probably in several areas of concern, the foremost being price. Because, as we have often discussed, the USA cannot sell LNG to Europe at the price Russia does and still make money. And nobody thinks for a second that Washington is actually concerned about energy security for Europe. It wants to make money for investors and shareholders, and even more than that, it wants the leverage that comes with being the dominant energy supplier. And Europe plainly does not want it to have either that leverage or the enrichment.

                Like

  44. So, the Ukrainians accused the Russians of stealing some stuff, including the lavatories from the 3 boats, before returning them.
    To refute this allegation, the Russian side published a video taken inside the boats, proving that everything was functioning normally.

    According to an FSB spokesperson: “If, during the [brief] sail from the Crimea to Ochakov, the Ukrainians managed to break the toilets, that’s their problem.”

    Like

    1. The Federal security service (FSB) of Russia has published a video demonstrating the normal condition of the boats “Berdyansk” and “Nikopol” and tug “Kapu Yana” that were detained after their challenge in the Kerch Straits and have been transferred to the Ukrainian side. Video publishedby Agency RIA Novosti in his Telegramchannel.

      Thus, the Department has reacted to the words of the commander of the Ukrainian Navy, Igor Voronchenko, who stated that the Russians had dismantled almost all of the equipment, including toilets, sockets and ceiling, and promised to show the world the “barbaric attitude” of Moscow.

      12:04, 21 ноября 2019
      ФСБ показала унитазы на украинских кораблях

      The FSB has shown the toilets in the Ukrainian ships

      These regular accusations of Russian barbarism are really pissing me off!

      They’re like a bloody stuck needle, those Yukie retards!

      Like

    1. I’d have thought that Sheldon Adelson’s pet rag “Israel Hayom” was doing more than enough making the foetid Satanyahu couple smell like roses but that newspaper’s efforts must be in vain. Maybe “Israel Hayom” should start charging readers to buy its copies. (It’s currently free.)

      It looks as if Israel will have to hold a new lot of elections to find a new government. Charging Satanyahu with corruption would remove him (or help remove him) from a position where he could sabotage the results of another election again to try to stay out of jail.

      Like

      1. You have to admit that the i-Sraeli press is far more open and critical (particularly about its role in the Middle East) than most of the western media where you would be smeared for expressing similar opinions.

        Antiwar.com regularly links to pieces, a recent one quoting a former head of Shin Bet saying that i-Sraeli policies are fuelling hostility not only towards i-Srael, but to Jews in general. I cannot imagine a politican in the west (who is not a fascist) saying that in public without being comprehensively smeared by those who call themselves the ‘Fourth Estate’.

        Like

  45. Perhaps this would be a good time for an update on how the trade war is going between China and the USA, what say you?

    Well, for starters, I’d just like to assure everyone it is going awesome; in fact, it’s the greatest trade war ever fought in the world, fought by the greatest president ever. The Chinese have had their worst year in 57 years – yes, that’s right, since 1962, when China was mostly a backward agrarian power with maybe one-hundredth of the industrial might it has today. Hard to believe, I know. That’s why I want to explain the very, very complicated metrics, because to the untrained eye it might appear that America is actually not doing very well. An untrained eye such as is in the head of someone who doesn’t have a degree in economics from the Wharton School of Finance, like the president has, is what I mean to say.

    For instance, the US trade deficit Trump vowed to eradicate is actually uppish, a little. Like 21% larger in September than it was his first full month in office. But the trade deficit with China is definitely down. Okay, in 2018 it was up 21% as well, from $346.8 Billion to $419.5 Billion. But this year it is under control, you better believe, and looks likely to come in at about $360 Billion.

    Well, yes, it’s true the difference is due more to a vastly decreased volume of trade with China rather than America kicking Chinee ass. And it’s probably true that Americans are paying more now for American products because they can’t get cheap Chinese products, or that tariffs have been added to the price of Chinese goods. But you can’t put a price on trade independence, and it’s just lucky America has a president who knows economics inside-out. If that were not the case, Americans might be concerned and alarmed at the thought that about 11 million American jobs depend on trade with China. Although jobs are getting better in Mexico, with whom America’s trade deficit grew from $63.3 Billion in 2016 to $80.7 Billion in 2018. This year looks likely to blow past that.

    So, in summary, hang tough. Your president is kicking ass and taking names, and everybody is lining up to make a deal.

    https://www.salon.com/2019/11/15/were-losing-trumps-trade-war_partner/

    Oh, by the way; the concentrated action against Huawei has pointed out to China how reliant it is – or was – on American-made chips. So China has announced the creation of a $29 Billion fund to create and produce its own semiconductors.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/china-sets-up-new-29-billion-semiconductor-fund-11572034480

    I’m not sure how that is benefiting the American tech sector, but at least it should ease the bitching about the Chinese stealing American intellectual property. Sadly, though, American investors can still invest in the new research and make a ton of money. Which should point out for everyone that the investor class has no real nationality, will dump patriotism in favour of making money any day, and cares nothing for anyone else.

    Like

  46. Well, well – looky h’yar. An FBI official – who may no longer work for the FBI – admits to having altered a document relating to the surveillance on Trump aide Carter Page, said unspecified alteration having twisted its substantive meaning. The implication is that the change made it more likely a warrant would be granted, and it is further implied the alteration was made for that specific purpose and did not reflect real apprehensions.

    https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/fbi-official-under-criminal-investigation-for-altering-document-related-to-carter-page-surveillance

    “The FISA applications targeting Page required the approval of top members of the FBI, the DOJ, and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, including officials as high up as former FBI Director James Comey and Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates. The first one was approved in October 2016, and the final renewal came in June 2017.”

    Like

  47. “But there is a more fundamental issue: What was the “national security” interest that Biden was upholding? Why is the United States supplying vast quantities of military aid and weaponry to Ukraine? It is part of the effort by American imperialism, carried out over two decades, to turn Ukraine into an American puppet state directed against Russia.

    For all the claims by the Democrats that they are shocked by Trump seeking “foreign interference” in the 2020 presidential election, every presidential election in Ukraine since 2004 has been characterized by massive foreign interference, particularly by the United States. One US official boasted in 2013 that Washington had expended more than $5 billion on its operations to install a pliable anti-Russian regime in Kiev.

    Detaching Ukraine from Russia has been a key US foreign policy objective since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991. Ukraine and Russia were the two largest components of the USSR. They share a land border of more than 2,000 kilometers and economies that were once closely integrated. Thirty percent of the Ukrainian people speak Russian as their first language, including the vast majority of the population of Crimea and the eastern Ukrainian region now controlled by pro-Russian forces.

    In both World War I and World War II, German imperialism made the seizure of Ukraine, with its rich soil and proximity to the oilfields of the Caucasus, a key strategic objective. The largest number of Soviet Jews massacred as part of the Holocaust were killed in Ukraine, in atrocities such as Babi Yar, the ravine outside Kiev where 34,000 Jews were machine-gunned, and Odessa, where 50,000 Jews were slaughtered.

    American imperialism is seeking to do what German imperialism failed twice to accomplish: use Ukraine as a launching pad for political subversion and military violence against Russia. Behind the backs of the American people, with little or no public discussion, the US government has been shipping large quantities of arms and other war materiel to Ukraine, in an operation that brings with it the increasing danger of a direct US military collision with Russia, a conflict between the two powers that between them deploy most of the world’s nuclear weapons.”

    https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/11/21/pers-n21.html

    Like

    1. It was Austrian Empire policy as well to cause unrest in the Borderlands. It was Austria that seeded the concept of a Ukraine nation and language amongst its subject “Ruthenes” (Austrian Empire Galitsians) and got them, if not to accept Roman Catholicism, then to accept the Greek-Uniate Church as theirs, a church with Orthodox rites but acceptance of the Roman Church pope as boss.

      If you want an insight into the attitude of the Austrian Empire towards its Orthodox Ruthenian subjects whom they suspected of promoting Imperial Russian interests, then check this out below. Few in the West know about it.

      Thalerhof internment camp

      Kinda looks familiar, don’t it?

      Before the outbreak of WW1, Orthodoxy had been gaining strength in Galitsia, especially in the Lemko Region. The Austrian government authorities in the “Kronland” of Austrian Galitsia (the only Austrian Kronland where German was not the administrative language, but Polish, in order that RC Polish nationalists there be pacified) suspected these new Orthodox adherents of being Russian sympathizers.

      During the war, Russia had occupied the Lemko Region by March 1915. The region was the scene of many bloody battles during the winter of 1914-15. There was a mass exodus from Russian occupied Austrian Galitsia of Ruthenes who were Greek-Uniate and sympathetic to Austria, and Jews.

      The Jewish population of Galitsia was huge, and they were strongly disliked by everyone in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, where anti-Semitism was extremely commonplace, as it was elsewhere in Europe. Austrian Galitsia was the most distant and backward of the Imperial Kronländer, but also the breadbasket for the Empire, so the Austrian war effort suffered badly because of the loss of Galitsia, and the German-Austrians also did not take too kindly to “uncivilised” Slav displaced persons from Galitsia swamping German-Austria, not to mention the fleeing Galitsian Jews, who were mostly dumped in Vienna.

      The Russians were, of course, friendly towards the Orthodox and Russophile Lemkos they encountered in the region, but persecuted pro-Ukrainian activists. Meanwhile, the Austrian officials had begun to persecute the Russophiles and others (both Lemkos and other Galitsians) who simply declared themselves to be of Rusyn or Russian nationality. Many of these “Russian sympathizers” (mostly peasants or clergy) were rounded up and sent to concentration camps in the western part of the Austrian empire, the most notorious of which was Thalerhof, near Graz. The site of the Thalerhof camp is now buried under Graz airport.

      The Lemkos, although they were only 2% of the Galitsian population, made up 30% of the prisoners at Thalerhof, that is, about 5,000 people. It is claimed by Lemko activists that between 1914 and 1917, almost all the Lemko intelligentsia perished or had their health ruined at Thalerhof or other such camps.

      After the war, the Lemko Region was strongly affected by the Ukrainian nationalist movement. Some Lemkos had fought with Ukrainian units of the Austro-Hungarian army and become sympathetic to the Ukrainian cause. Other Lemkos however, especially the survivors of Thalerhof, blamed the Galitsian Ukrainians for delivering the Rusyn/Russophile Lemkos to the Austrian authorities.


      Herzlich Willkommen im Thalerhof!


      On the cross is inscribed IN RUSSIAN:

      To the victims of Thalerhof
      1914-1918
      Galitsian Rus’

      Like

      1. You have to admit though, the Austrians (of certain generations) make the Best Nazis Ever. They really put their Teutonic brothers across the border to shame with their enthusiasm.

        It was the Auztrians (FM Alois Mock) who were leading the public charge for Europe to support the ‘democratic’ Croatzians (World War II flag, World War II currency, WWII loyaty oaths that any non-pure Croatzian who worked in important areas were forced to sign). Scratch an Auztrian…

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alois_Mock

        …In 1991, he urged Hans-Dietrich Genscher and Helmut Kohl to recognize Croatia and Slovenia as independent states as soon as possible.[2]..

        Genscher and the joke of German denazification. Old DNA dies hard. He was 13 on the outbreak of WWII. Like many others, it was easy to play the democrat when there was no choice and fealty to Power, but his actions betrayed him. All you need to do is believe in Democracy. The trick was to continue to pay hommage to i-Sreal, and everything else is a free pass.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans-Dietrich_Genscher..

        …On 20 December 2013, it was revealed that Genscher played a key role in coordinating the release and flight to Germany of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former head of Yukos. Genscher had first met Khodorkovsky in 2002 and had chaired a conference at which Khodorkovsky blasted Russian President Vladimir Putin’s pursuit of his oil company.[47] Khodorkovsky asked his lawyers during a 2011 prison visit to let Genscher help mediate early release.
        ####

        Class-A shit to the end of his days.

        Like

    2. I think the percentage of Russian speakers as first language in Ukraine is a heck of a lot more than 30%. Double that is still far too low. The current and previous western puppet Presidents of Ukraine clearly are from Russian-as-first-language families,Avakov can’t speak Ukrop, the younger Klitshchko was speaking Russian the other day, Ramzukov- first speaker in parliament is clearly Russian as his main language.

      Kiev is obviously a Russian majority speaking city, as is the whole of the Novorossiya area.
      No other country in the world doesnt have as an official language one that is understood by 100% of the population

      Like

      1. I believe I read just yesterday that Mayor Pete Butwhatever is surging, and is now the frontrunner. Not much should be inferred from that, though, since it is common for the fortunes of various candidates to ebb and flow. It does show, however, that the registered-Democrat electorate is not very comfortable with Uncle Joe.

        Like

    1. As I customarily say in such situations, let freedom ring. Good to know they have options to keep their bums warm this winter if a new gas contract does not ensue. Their American brothers have their backs.

      Like

    2. Can they even sail those through the Bosporus? I thought Turkey didn’t want very explosive ships moving through the middle of a densely populated city.

      Like

      1. See the US Embassy to Banderastan Facebook page above:

        LNG destined for Ukraine arrived yesterday at the Świnoujście, Poland LNG landing terminal in the Baltic Sea.

        Pumped from there to Galitsia and the rest of “Independent” Ukraine.


        Monrovia, Liberia, registered LNG tanker “Patris” at Swinoujscie (formerly Swinemünde, Germany) LNG terminal, Poland, 20 Nov 2019

        Like

        1. Right smack bang on the post 1945 German-Polish border.

          The unbiased Wiki goes to town as regards this border:

          After Germany’s defeat in the war, the Soviet Union imposed new borders in eastern Europe at the Potsdam Conference, which made Swinoujscie part of Poland. The entire population was forcibly expelled and replaced by ethnic Poles. The German–Polish Border Treaty of 1990 officially affirmed the existing borders after the fall of the Iron Curtain.

          See, the new border was imposed by the Orcs: nothing to do with the other WWII allies’ representatives at the Potsdam Conference!


          above: A Potsdam Conference session including Clement Attlee (UK Prime Minister — Churchill had been fucked off in the 1945 general election) ), Ernest Bevin (UK Foreign Minister), Vyacheslav Molotov, Joseph Stalin, William D. Leahy, Joseph E. Davies, James F. Byrnes, and Harry S. Truman.

          Like

          1. ME, when will you stop letting facts get in the way of a persuasive opinion/argument/point of view/wikifact? 😉 We live in the future now, ‘fact’ is what happens between breakfast and lunch. Or is that lunch and dinner. Or….

            Like

          2. Well, I never heard the Poles complaining about this opportunity to gobble up ethnic German villages! This is why Poles are known as the “hyenas of Europe”, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

            Like

    1. Morocco is buying 36 Ah-64E Apache gunships. Anyone fancy a holiday in the western Sahel?
      Another war sponsored by the USA which will be of great benefit to their GREATEST EVER ALLIES, U-rope, and certainly not assist IS/ISIS/ISIL/DAESH/Whatever…

      FlightGlobal: Morocco approved for 36 AH-64E with manned-unmanned teaming
      https://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/morocco-approved-for-36-ah-64es-with-manned-unmanned-462468/

      WTF do they get the money from? Washington will of course provide support. At some point there will be no more beds left to s/t.

      Like

      1. Why doesn’t Morocco just write a check to Boeing equal to the expected profit on such a sale? Or better yet, just have the Treasury Department wire US taxpayer money directly to Boeing and keep the middleman to save the 10% facilitation fee.

        Like

  48. Not content with threatening the Baltic beacons of freedom, or crushing the Georgians, or poisoning innocent diners in Olde England, the baleful Eye of Sauron was cast upon NE Spain…

    https://www.elperiodico.com/es/politica/20191121/audiencia-investiga-espias-rusos-catalunya-cdr-7744846?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=elPeriodico-ed16h

    So the Catalan independence referendum was the work of Russians. Is there no end to their evil genius?

    Like

    1. Yes, they more or less just cruise all over the world stirring up independence movements in non-aligned countries, financing and encouraging the opposition and egging them on to revolution. They should instead take their example from a mind-your-own-business country like the United States.

      Like

  49. Courtney Act: ‘The UK has the most advanced relationship with sexuality’

    Shane Jenek, aka Courtney Act, has said that people shouldn’t shy away from labelling their sexuality.

    Speaking on The Independent‘s dating and relationships podcast, “Millennial Love”, the Australian drag queen explained that people should embrace labels such as bisexual and pansexual because they “help to bring visibility to the LGBT+ community”.

    Makes me proud to be a Pom!

    Like

    1. Well, she is lovely. I emphatically do not agree, however, that ’embracing’ an alphabet-soup of self-identified gender variations is a recipe for a smooth-running society. Politicians don’t think so, either – the only time they turn on the misty-eyed tolerance is leading up to elections, when they want everyone (who can vote) to know how much they love their queer brothers and sisters. Sexuality is just another wedge political issue, with the political folk exploiting it on the one side and the activists leveraging it for more rights on the other.

      Of course there are people who are drawn to the same gender as they were born, of which there physically are only two. Always have been, always will be. I daresay God is not too upset about it. No particular reason they should be persecuted or shunned, but there is also no reason they should be elevated to preciousness, either. They really are just like the rest of us, which means allowances have to be made and otherwise mind your own business. Those conditions prevailing, there’s no reason we can’t all get along. Don’t make me notice, and we’ll be fine. Things like assigning yourself a special label (all of which I have to learn so as not to offend anyone), prancing around in gay parades and squalling for special rights is making me notice.

      Like

    2. It’s a funny thing in these ‘woke’ times…..if ‘Blackface’ is beyond the pale, so to speak, why is drag still acceptable? One absurd parody is universally condemned, the other celebrated.

      Like

      1. You know, you’re right. I never thought of it that way, but it is only with women’s permission that drag is not interpreted as a a fearful insult. It would not matter, of course, what men said or thought about it. It is only acceptable so long as women tolerate it.

        Like

      2. “beyond the pale…” great pun, haha!
        This pale, of course, referring not to color, but to an area of settlement, as in the “Jewish Pale”, or “Irish Pale”, or places where people were supposed to stay put.
        I looked up the etymology in wiki:

        The word pale, meaning a fence, derives ultimately from the Latin word pālus, meaning “stake”, specifically a stake used to support a fence. A paling fence is made of pales ganged side by side, and the word palisade is derived from the same root. From this came the figurative meaning of “boundary”.
        If somebody is “beyond the pale”, it means they escaped.
        Americans have a similar expression, “off the reservation”, which originally meant Indians who escaped from their reservations.

        Nowadays, of course, Indians can leave if they wish to, it’s their choice.

        Like

          1. Speaking of fences, I wonder what’s happened to Yat’s Great Fence of Yukieland?


            Ukrainian border guard Oksana Ivanets near the frontier fence with Russia in eastern Ukraine

            Above courtesy of:

            Like

  50. Anyone seen this?

    https://www.checkpointasia.net/russian-military-to-assign-soldiers-according-to-genetic-tests/

    https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/russian-military-will-soon-assign-soldiers-based-their-genetic-passports-95646

    I must confess the first of these was taken from Unz Review and written by Steve Sailer. I also apologize for the content’s age, as it has been over a week (8 or 9 days, to be precise) since its publication (November 13).

    Either way, what are your thoughts on the idea, let alone whether it’s true or not? Anyone?

    Like

    1. From the above-linked National Interest article:

      No diversity!!!!

      Russians are racists! Russians are racists!

      Take a closer look.

      I have worked with some US shitwits here, who, on seeing very few Negroes in Mordor, immediately label Russia and Russians as racists, especially when they hear the Russian word негр, which they wrongly conclude means something in English that it does not.

      The second biggest ethnic group in Moscow (the biggest, 80% plus, consisting of Eastern Slavs: likewise in Russia) consists of Tatars. I am pretty sure there are quite a few Tatars in the above photo.

      There are few people here of African descent because the Russian Empire had no African colonies and no enslaved Africans.

      There were plenty of enslaved Russian (Slav) peasants though.

      Like

      1. I was already aware of the multi-ethnic nature of Russia and the lack of African colonies (and by extension African slaves), but my question wasn’t about that; it was whether it’s true or not that the Russian Army is assigning roles to soldiers based on genetics. I mean, after losing a lot of people in WWII to soldiers that considered Slavs to be Untermenschen, it’s unlikely that Russia would do this to deliberately exclude certain ethnicities from serving the nation they have lived in for decades if not centuries.

        Considering Steve Sailer and Russia Insider lifted the original from National Interest (an American publication), I’m tempted to call it bogus unless the Russian media (both in English and Russian) has discussed it as well.

        Like

        1. I would say that you’ve answered your own question. I guess time will tell but I do like that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. I see none offered. Who could disagree with that?

          Like

        2. Well, armies have always had certain requirements for height, weight, etc. Once the DNA code was cracked, I reckon it’s inevitable that genetic testing and requirements will be a thing for holding certain jobs like soldiering. It’s not necessarily a good thing, but I think it’s inevitable.
          Where people have to be vigilant and draw the line, is when racists try to use DNA to discriminate against people. Not in the sense of, “You can’t be a sailor because you’re prone to seasickness,” but in the sense of, “We don’t allow you to have any job, or voting rights, or even exist, because we simply don’t like you.”

          Given what we know about Unz, we shouldn’t listen to anything they say, because they are actual true racists. Unzies despise African-Americans, Native Americans, and others. Including Jews, despite the supposedly high IQ’s of the latter.

          Oddly enough, African-Americans should come out ahead for certain occupations, as should Jews. And Native Americans have their strengths too, along with the weaknesses. Actually, if we took DNA into account, then pretty much everybody should be be able to excel in certain occupations and careers…. So maybe we should go with that… I would trust science over Unzies opinions.

          Like

          1. Yes, that’s a good point too. “Genetic selection” means an individual’s DNA, so that an individual might be, say, unfit for a certain job. For example, to be a lumberjack, one needs great upper-arm strength. But that does not have a racial bearing, necessarily.

            Already — and here is the danger — employers are intruding into their employees personal medical condition. In the U.S. you can barely get even a menial job any more without submitting to drug tests, etc. And in some occupations I have heard of employers trying to gain access to medical records concerning an employee’s cholesterol levels, etc. If given the chance, employers would prefer not to hire people with heart disease or diabetics, etc.

            The racial angle only comes into play for certain diseases, for example in the U.S. there is an epidemic of sickle-cell disease, but it only ever affects (as far as I know) people of African descent. So, if a person has this disease, they would do best to hide this fact from their employer.

            Like

            1. And I’ve met some Jews (“race”, not religion) who were in their features very Aryan, as the Nazi racist considered that term.


              Reinhard Heydrich — rumoured jewish ancestry: at school, they took the piss out of him and called him “moses”.


              A typical Nazi “Aryan”.

              Like

            2. In some parts of the Mediterranean Sea area, especially in southern Italy and Greece, an equivalent condition called thalassaemia exists. Carriers of the gene that can cause the condition (that is, they have one copy of the gene) have some resistance to malaria.

              Like

              1. The theory is that, in these areas afflicted with malaria, Darwinian evolution selected for people with one copy of the mutant gene, as it conferred resistance to malaria. This greatly benefited sub-Saharan Africans swatting diseased mosquitos all day long. The down side is that 2 copies of the gene curse the individual with sickle-cell disease. In rougher, Darwinian times, many of these miserable souls would have perished before achieving child-bearing years. Modern medicine can treat them and prolong their life-span, but not always save them from horrendous pain and misery in their lifetimes.
                This disease is a horrible curse for many African-Americans. Fortunately, there is hope on the horizon, as scientists/biologists are working on a way to fix this glitch via genetic engineering. They will be able to fix the gene and insert the proper gene into the fetus, thus saving many children and adults from a life time of pain and suffering.

                Like

            3. Don’t forget American colleges, and the deliberate attempts of their admissions process to discover if applicants are Asian.

              https://www.chicagotribune.com/opinion/commentary/ct-asian-fail-affirmative-action-colleges-perspec-0811-md-20170811-story.html

              Asian applicants with stellar scores are frequently rejected in favour of “legacies and recruited athletes — groups that are predominantly white.” Children of the rich and powerful, and jocks who can hustle the pigskin for Dear Old Harvard.

              Like

  51. “Anti-Corruption Foundation” Idiots: How Navalny Plans to Sue the President
    November 21, 2019
    Stalker Zone

    Just one small point, bullshitting “lawyer”:

    The Russian Constitution

    Article 91

    The President of the Russian Federation shall possess immunity.

    Like

    1. Pooty-Poot is not the audience. BBC, WP/NYT/WSJ/The Wires are. Without the oxygen of publicity Navalny is a nothing. I guess it’s better than getting a job.

      Like

  52. 60 Minutes: Estonia Has Gone Insane! Chairman of Parliament Wants Russian Lands and Reparations!
    21 Nov 2019

    Vesti News

    It turns out that our native country “occupied” not only Donbass, Crimea, but also a part of Estonia. The chairman of the parliament of this country, which turned out to be not friendly to us, but their people are friendly, decided to demand a part of some territory which, according to him, used to belong to Estonia.

    The nerve of the Estonians is breathtaking. Russia in its various iterations has controlled the eastern shores of the Baltic Sea 250 of the last 300 years. Estonia’s statehood only came about thanks to the Bolsheviks and Soviet Russia.

    Like

  53. Bad day(s) for Elon Musk and his super (ugly) truck:

    https://www.rt.com/news/474048-musk-cybertruck-glass-fail/

    Video is hilarious.

    …and his rocket explodes but they sort of expected it so it really was not a failure:

    https://news.yahoo.com/spacex-rocket-elon-musk-wants-130101684.html

    “The purpose of today’s test was to pressurise systems to the max, so the outcome was not completely unexpected,” a spokesperson for the space firm said.

    In case anyone was wondering, the rocket was built by a company that specializes in water tower construction. Musk has done some good work but his constant hype and wild-eyed promises are too much. He does have a cadre of fan-boy writers to paper over such things.

    Like

    1. Yes, I saw it at ZeroHedge, and one of the comments recommended it be called the ‘Tesla Dildozer’. Musk attracts extremely polarizing attitudes; many think he is a conceited scammer and his products are just rich-boy fantasies, but just as many think he is a misunderstood genius and visionary. I maintain the Tesla electric car is a very good product, perhaps the best of its kind, and if electric vehicles are going to become the norm, Tesla is well out in front. I would never have considered owning an EV because they are nerdy and have crappy performance unless you like to drive at wagon-train speeds while yodeling about how green you are. Tesla blew that picture apart – the Model S is a beautiful car (I’m afraid I don’t care for the new Model 3, and I’m not a huge fan of the SUV Model X, either). But Musk did show you could have a hot-looking car in the Model S, and the roadster (which we haven’t seen much of lately) also proved an electric vehicle could be fast and have phenomenal acceleration.

      He should have concentrated on just building good electric cars. But he got to love the spotlight.

      Like

      1. Lots of new EVs, both cars and pickup trucks coming out from the major auto companies. Tesla has done a very good job (but with some major stumble such as poor QC on their early Model 3s).

        The challenge for new buyers is that EV technology is evolving so rapidly that it creates a tendency to wait for improved models. For example, there is talk of new battery technology that will double the range to 400-500 miles coming out in the next year or so. Also, Ford is planning to introduce a battery F-150 in the relatively near future.

        Will probably trade in my beloved and ever faithful 10 year old car for an EV this winter.

        Like

        1. I suspect it is only the fierce resistance of the hydrocarbons lobby which prevents progressive legislation limiting the production of gas-powered cars until they are phased out altogether. Now that their performance is matched by EV’s so that there is something to satisfy even the sports-car fanatics, there is no real reason for gas-powered cars any more other than range. That will probably continue to improve as limiting factors are analyzed and overcome, and the recharging process improved until you could probably drive 400 miles, recharge while eating dinner, and then get on your way again. When traveling long-distance by car, I seldom drive longer than 500 miles in a day anyway.

          I have to say I loathe the F-150. It has gotten steadily bigger over the years until it is a thyroidal monster that takes up a disproportionate amount of room in ferry lanes aboard the ship, and if I had the time to do a study I’d bet 80% of them have only a single occupant. They have a default alarm which operates on an inclinometer, so that if the vehicle is off and the key not in the vehicle, and the computer detects that the vehicle is high on one side (which happens every time the vessel turns), it interprets it as someone jacking up the vehicle to remove the wheels. So then the horn brays annoyingly, usually from a vehicle surrounded by passengers who were trying to sleep in their cars, or directly outside the pet area which makes the dogs howl. Other offenders are BMW’s, and the Bentley/Volvo/Audi group, all of which share the same-sounding alarm. I can recognize all of them as soon as I hear them. The F-150, F-350 and the Mustang share the same alarm as well. If I hear that blasting horn, I know immediately it is one of those. I know how to disable the alarm, but that relies on paging the driver, and then waiting around until he shows up. If you page the driver to shut off his alarm (and it is almost invariably a he) and you don’t stay there to suggest disabling it, all he does is reset it.

          Like

          1. Did not know that about Ford pickups. I’m looking forward to a toasty warm preheated car before heading off to work. If EV usage continue to grow, presumably the electrical infrastructure will need upgrading although charging at night should minimize excessive demand on the grid.

            Like

            1. Well, that’s just my opinion, because they cause a problem for me on the car decks. But the F-150 is still the best-selling truck in North America by a wide margin. I guess there must be plenty of money about, because despite the pickup truck’s well-deserved reputation as a gas-guzzler, a lot od guys feel like they have to have one even if they only use it to commute to and from work. There’s just something cool about being able to look down on everyone else when you’re driving, I guess.

              I would have liked at various times to have a light truck myself, except I wanted it for hauling stuff too big to fit in a car, like sheets of plywood. I liked the Ford Ranger, which was about half the size of today’s F-150. But they stopped making the Ranger a few years back, although you can still find low-mileage used ones in good condition. Nissan and Mazda also still make a small-size pickup.

              A couple of my friends have the Nissan Leaf EV, and really like it. Current low-voltage chargers such as most people have at home take a long time to charge your battery, though. There are a few high-capacity chargers commercially available that can charge up your car faster than charging a cell phone, but they are few and far between at present and those few are in parking spaces which are hotly competed for and usually carry a time limit of 40 minutes. Some Leaf models which are 5 years old show no significant battery degradation and are still charging at about the same capacity as when they were new. And batteries are only going to improve with their commercial viability and demand.

              One effect that it seems to me was largely unanticipated is the death of the classic car. Those were once very much sought after as collector’s items, but their value to a collector relies on them being driveable, so you can show off. And all of them are gas-powered. You could probably convert a ’66 Mustang to electric propulsion, but it would destroy its value as a collector’s item, and it would make much more sense to just buy a new one. The collapse of the classic-car market is already starting.

              Like

              1. Only one thing better than owning a pickup truck is having a friend who owns a pickup truck. Same applies for a boat.

                Viewed about 20 YouTube videos on EVs; mostly on the Tesla Model 3. The Model 3 is clearly the most advanced in technology and performance but the price gets a little crazy with options like AWD . The near-total centralization of all controls on a touch screen will take time to adjust to. My wife ‘s lead foot and a zero to sixty time of 4 seconds will be an interesting combination.

                Tesla recently announced development of a battery pack good for a million miles without serious degradation. It’s not clear when it would be available. A million mile battery would last 50-100 years of typical use. Anyway, the car itself will fall apart after a few hundred thousand miles of typical driving (what, 10-15 years?) and be very dated in features and appearance. I guess the battery could be extracted for installation in a new car (without batteries). That would be a huge savings in consumption of rare stuff like lithium.

                Like

                1. I just think the Model 3 looks cheap. It’s meant to offer an introductory-level EV, because the Model S was perceived to be a toy of the wealthy and a prestige buy. I guess it was expensive; I never priced it. But it was a beautiful-looking car. The Model 3 looks like a knock-off afterthought, even if it does incorporate technology which was just a dream when the Model S came out.

                  Like

                2. I watched pretty much the whole presentation, though, at another source, and while the broken windows definitely did happen – Musk’s aghast reaction was something – but the rear-left wheel starting to come off looks like a fake. I didn’t see it happen anywhere else, and the God-awful-looking truck seemed quite solid. The tonneau cover acting as a solar battery (an option) is a brilliant idea.

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  54. Perhaps RT might like to do a story on this as regards the UK:

    One woman in four experiences domestic violence in her lifetime
    Office for National Statistics (2016) Focus on Violent Crime and Sexual Offences, 2014/15

    Two women are killed each week by a current or former partner in England and Wales
    Office for National Statistics (2016) Compendium – Homicide (average taken over 10 years)

    I wonder why Scotland and Northern Ireland are not included?

    In the year ending March 2016, 1.2 million women reported experiences of domestic abuse in England and Wales
    Office for National Statistics (2016) Domestic Abuse in England and Wales: year ending March 2016

    Whilst this number is shocking, we also know it is grossly underestimated. The cap on the number of violent crimes published, set at five per victim, means that even if a woman experienced 100 incidents of domestic violence, only five would make it into the official data. Thanks to research by Professor Sylvia Walby, we know that were the cap to be removed, the number of incidents of domestic violence would increase by approximately 70%.

    Source: Refuge

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    1. More recent stats:

      Domestic killings will not end if no serious action taken – Refuge
      Fri 13 Sep 2019 15.53 BST First published on Fri 13 Sep 2019 08.19 BST

      Charities and experts have described official figures showing the number of people killed as a result of domestic violence at a five-year high as “truly horrifying”.

      Data from police forces in England and Wales revealed that 173 people were killed in domestic violence-related homicides last year, an increase of 32 on 2017.

      Around three-quarters of people killed by a partner, ex-partner or family member were women, and suspects were predominantly male.

      The statistics, based on freedom of information data obtained by the BBC, found there were 165 domestic killings in 2014, 160 in 2015, 139 in 2016 and 141 in 2017.

      See that?

      The statistics, based on freedom of information data obtained by the BBC….

      And 2 months later the BBC publishes a lengthy feature on domestic violence in Russia.

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    1. Clever Ukrainians! Now Zelenskiy will appeal to Russia to get new toilets and electrical sockets, and Russia will give them to Ukraine because it fears the wrath of Pompeoshenko and the United States, and Ukraine will have outfitted its auxiliary tugs with new toilets and electrical fittings for free! Sooooo tricky – you have to get up pretty early in the morning to fool Ukraine.

      Seriously, examples like this highlight how unreliable the country is as a partner, always trying some scam or other, because it knows now that the west will back it up and uncritically pass on its nonsense as news. It was wise of Russia to have a Ukrainian agent verify the condition of the ships before they left the dock, and while that and the AIS data will not convince anyone in the west, it serves as a convincing argument to Russia that they should abandon Ukraine to its western puppeteers, and let it fail altogether. It’s unfortunate for the decent people who will be affected, but they could always move to Russia, and leave the place empty. Then the United States will frack the shit out of it and drain the black earth of its sustenance, and move on once it has wrecked the place. But better that than to do something stupid like signing a gas transit contract with Ukraine and enabling further thievery.

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  55. Latvian schoolbook extract:

    “If you meet a Russian, talk to him like you’re standing in a window on the second floor, and he’s in the yard, up to their ears in shit and dirt, because that’s the difference between Estonians and Russians. Be civil and coldly affable, at times even smile. Don’t hit them in the face, but look down on them, and you’ll see how scared they are of you. This is how the dog fears even the easiest hint of dismay in their master’s voice, and the Russians, with their broad souls, even today, are nothing but the Tatars slaves they have been for centuries. “

    Learnt their lessons well in the 1940s off their Nazi friends as regards their neighbour Slav Untermenschen, didn’t they?

    See: “If You Meet a Russian, Say This…”: A Lesson in Latvian Literature or Inter-Ethnic Strife?

    November 22, 2019
    Stalker Zone

    Full backing off the EU as well, or can the continuous EU silence about Baltic State discrimination against Russians and out-and-out celebration of Nazism be judged otherwise?

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      1. In fairness, though, the noxious quote comes from a “work of literature” that is part of the Latvian school curriculum, or so they say. I have no idea if this “work” is an actual classic that must be taught, or they’re just saying it is.

        In either case, if the work is one that must be taught, then the teachers could use this as a “teaching moment”, and allow the students to express their opinions about why the author was such a racist dick.

        In American schools, there are similar issues with teaching American classics such as “Huckleberry Finn” and “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”, because of their liberal use of the n-word. Some schools just cop out and remove them from the curriculum. But this is not the correct solution. These works need to be taught to each generation, and there are various tactical ways to approach the task, if the teachers are clever enough. They just need to put their thinking caps on.

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    1. Qui tacet consentire videtur

      That’s the phrase I had at the back of mind when writing of the EU silence as regards its Baltic chums..

      He who is silent is perceived to be in agreement.

      Hence the term “tacit acceptance”.

      Of course they agree!

      It is in Western Europe where fascism was born and took root.

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      1. Tacit agreement is possibly from tacit relocation, a term of art in property law meaning that a rental period is extended on the same negotiated conditions established previously in writing providing lessor accepts payments from lessee.

        In the Baltics the EU etc appear to be condoning or turning a blind eye to repellent behaviour.

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    2. Maybe they could move some of the Estonian multi-floor buildings to Russia, where they would probably have a better opportunity to look down upon Russians up to their ears in shit and dirt. I only say that because the population of Russia is up around 147 million, while the population of Estonia has stalled at 1.32 million since 2013, except for 2015 when it briefly dipped below that. I realize Estonians are natural masters and all, but each of them has 113 Russians to look down on, so it’s a busy job.

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  56. Because there is not enough money, the Ukraine has stopped paying state benefits for pregnancy. Three times SUGS!

    SUGS — an abbreviation of the slogan “Glory to the Ukraine! Glory to the Heroes!”

    No really, I shouldn’t laugh!

    I really shouldn’t!

    20.11.2019 #FSSU has suspended the transfer of funds for the payment of sick leave and benefits maternity insured persons. At present the Fund has filed financing statements-calculations 13,573 billion hryvnia, which exceeds the estimate on the direction of the 1,038 billion UAH.

    FSSU [Фонд соціального страхування України] — Ukraine Social Insurance Fund

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    1. Like

    2. I think that you will agree, for Russians to steal the toilets from Ukrainians on top of this indignity….well, it’s just too much. Probably Putin stole the money from the Social Insurance Fund, too – I’m sure there’s some way the Russians can be blamed for that. Hail, Poroshenko, who only grows richer as Ukrainians get poorer. They should ask him how he does it.

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  57. Is this more anti-Russian/commie/soviet BS from Russia Insider or is it plausible?
    https://russia-insider.com/en/moscow-has-second-worst-road-rage-world-losing-only-ulaanbaatar-mongolia/ri27885

    Mister Auto has released a survey of which cities in the world are the best and worst to drive in that found Moscow has the second highest road rage index in the world, after only Ulaanbaatar.

    Moscow came in overall at 91 out of 100. Not saying it can’t be true, but, seeing Dubai listed as near the best in the list causes me to be skeptical.

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    1. Nearly 20 years ago, I once saw an altercation near my house, which took place after one driver had shunted another, who was waiting for the traffic lights to go green.

      The shunted driver got out and started bollocking the shunter, who in his turn started shouting back and pushing the offended party, which latter’s passenger then got out, went to the radiator of the Zhiguli, withdrew the starter handle, with which those vehicles were then still equipped, then walked around the offside of both cars in order to twat the shunter over the back of his head with said handle.

      The shunter dropped like a bag of shit.

      Both the shunted party and his passenger then got back into their vehicle and drove off, leaving the floored shunter to the carrion crows that were already gathering around his prone body in order to pick out his eyes.

      (That last bit about the crows I made up.)

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      1. My impression from seeing traffic situations in Vladivostok (often chaotic) is that Russian drivers are quite patient. But that city at the time was almost Chinese is its chaos on the roads, the prevalence of horns until blowing the horn became meaningless because everyone tuned it out, and the near-complete ignoring of traffic signals such as lights and crosswalks. But as far as muscling into traffic from on-ramps and side roads, I personally saw very few displays of rage. Many cars had a little vertical plastic rod attached to the leading edge of the right front fender, capped with a small red or pink miniature cone. Drivers used this to calculate to a fraction of an inch how close the front of their car was to other vehicles, and gradually wormed their way into the traffic flow until the less nervy driver gave way. I didn’t personally see any accidents or collisions.

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        1. I should add that that road-rage incident that I have described above is the only one that I have witnessed here during the course of the past 25 years — but then again, I don’t drive: I zip around Moscow on the metro and journey into the country on suburban electric trains.

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    1. “The long-expected indictment of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on serious charges of corruption, fraud and breach of trust stemming from three long-running corruption cases has brought the political crisis that has deadlocked the country for the last year to the boiling point.

      The 70-year-old Netanyahu has refused to resign the premiership in the face of these charges.

      Instead, he lashed out at the police, investigators, the attorney general and the entire judicial system, denouncing the indictment as an “attempted coup” that sought to overturn his premiership. In a provocative speech, he used terms such as “a governmental coup against the prime minister,” “libels,” “a tainted investigative process,” “the world of crime,” “fabricating cases,” “suborning witnesses,” and “extortion.”

      His aim was to incite his far-right supporters against the justice system and encourage them to take to the streets on his behalf.”

      Hmmm…might this presage a card Trump may play…..

      https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/11/23/isra-n23.html

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    1. When the curtain closes on the gas-powered car – which moment the USA will try to postpone for as long as possible, since it is an exporter of oil and gas – lithium will be the new oil. And Washington wants to control it.

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    1. Racism, revenge, forcing surrender to the US and a warning shot to the Soviet Union is my view on the double nuclear attack on Japan. If not for their rapid development of their own bomb, the Soviets were next based on racism, religion and socialism.

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