192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
Real Music
 
  5  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 01:14 am
http://memeshappen.com/media/created/I-refuse-to-release-my-taxes--because-of-all-my-ties-to-Russia-meme-55936.jpg
0 Replies
 
Real Music
 
  5  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 01:17 am
https://pics.onsizzle.com/why-dontihear-the-people-who-spent-yearsdemanding-my-birth-certificate-5931656.png
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  3  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 01:22 am
Quote:
A nine-year-old boy has killed himself after enduring four days of homophobic bullying at school in Denver, Colorado, his mother says.

Leia Pierce told KDVR-TV that her son, Jamel Myles, revealed to her over the summer that he was gay.

She said Jamel wanted to go to school and tell his classmates because he was "proud" to be gay.

Denver Public Schools (DPS) say crisis counsellors have been made available to students at Jamel's elementary school.


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-45323933
Real Music
 
  4  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 01:48 am
https://i.imgflip.com/23mnln.jpg
0 Replies
 
Real Music
 
  4  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 01:52 am
https://i.imgflip.com/1s9dvm.jpg
gungasnake
 
  -3  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 02:53 am
@Real Music,
https://i.redd.it/uq8oisiskce01.jpg

http://www.bearfabrique.org/bimages_files/image008.jpg

Globalists view Christians as fair game for every kind of evil/stupid scheme in the world. I've been waiting a long time to hear any politician with the power to do anything about it say something about protecting Christianity and Christians in this world. Prior to Donald Trump taking over the white house, Putin had been the only taker.

Matt Drudge is referring to Putin as the leader of the free world:

http://beforeitsnews.com/alternative/2013/08/matt-drudge-putin-is-the-leader-of-the-free-world-2752284.html

Pat Buchanan believes (as I do) that God is on Putin's side:
http://townhall.com/columnists/patbuchanan/2014/04/04/whose-side-is-god-on-now-n1818499/page/full

Quote:
In his Kremlin defense of Russia's annexation of Crimea, Vladimir Putin, even before he began listing the battles where Russian blood had been shed on Crimean soil, spoke of an older deeper bond.

Crimea, said Putin, "is the location of ancient Khersones, where Prince Vladimir was baptized. His spiritual feat of adopting Orthodoxy predetermined the overall basis of the culture, civilization and human values that unite the peoples of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus."

Russia is a Christian country, Putin was saying.


http://justfunfacts.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/cathedral-of-christ-the-saviour-1.jpg

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8a/Moscow_July_2011-34a.jpg

http://www.pravoslavie.ru/sas/image/102173/217361.p.jpg?mtime=1444920871

https://b1.ro/pictures/2016/07/06/192710.jpg

"Christianity is the foundation of the Russian state!":
https://www.apnews.com/c5323a9799cc41748b62a517f63388f3

I mean, I can understand why the fricking satanists who think they have some infernal right to rule the world might be alarmed....

0 Replies
 
gungasnake
 
  -3  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 03:31 am
https://i.redd.it/uq8oisiskce01.jpg
gungasnake
 
  -3  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 03:34 am
@izzythepush,
There is no such thing as a nine year old being a homosexual. This is the evil fruit of libtard brainwashing.
neptuneblue
 
  6  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 03:59 am
@gungasnake,
Did you really just PRAISE Putin for all the good, hard work he does for his country? Really, did you just do THAT????

When John McCain calls Putin a “thug and a murderer” this is what he’s talking about

By Hanna KozlowskaDecember 16, 2016

Many key figures—including president Barack Obama, members of the Electoral College, and senate majority leader Mitch McConnell—have voiced concerns about Russia’s hacking campaign during the US election and its ties to the incoming administration. But leave it to Arizona senator and longtime Kremlin critic John McCain to bluntly explain why the United States should be worried.

“Vladimir Putin is a thug and a murderer and a killer and a KGB agent,” McCain said on CBS’s “Face of the Nation” on Dec. 11. Speaking two days later about Rex Tillerson, Trump’s pick for secretary of state, who received the Russian “Order of Friendship” in 2013, McCain said in a radio interview: ”Frankly, I would never accept an award from Vladimir Putin because then you kind of give some credence and credibility to this butcher, this KGB agent, which is what he is.”

Putin, who has ruled Russia since 2000, has created a regime under which his opponents are murdered; political prisoners are sent to Siberia for decades behind bars; minority rights are suppressed; opposition is quashed; foreign territory is forcefully annexed; and Syria’s bloodthirsty president, Bashar Assad, enjoys direct military support for his massacres.

Here’s a non-exhaustive list of examples of Putin’s abusive rule in Russia.

Murdering enemies
The list of people suspected murdered on orders from the Russian leader or people close to him is long. It includes several of Putin’s early critics (paywall), among them liberal politician Boris Nemtsov, investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya, and exiled former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko. A UK government report showed that Litvinenko’s death—he was poisoned using polonium in London—while was “probably” approved by Putin.

Both Politkovskaya and Litvinenko had tried to investigate a series of bombings in 1999, when Putin was prime minister, that killed some 300 people in four Russian cities. The authorities blamed the bombings on Chechen rebels and used them as a pretext to unleash a war on Chechnya, but there are strong suspicions 1 that they were a “false-flag” attack by Russia’s own own security services.

When confronted with Putin’s record of killings on a TV show last year, Trump answered, “Well, I think that our country does plenty of killing, too, Joe.” He added, ”I’ve always felt fine about Putin. He’s a strong leader. He’s a powerful leader.”

Imprisoning dissenters
According to a list from Russian human-rights group Memorial, there are now 102 people held in Russian prisons for their political beliefs. In this, Putin’s Russia is continuing Tsarist and Soviet traditions: Political dissenters are still being sent to Siberia or to work camps as in Stalinist days. Famous past prisoners have included oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky, feminist punk collective Pussy Riot, and Ukrainian pilot Nadiya Savchenko. Still confined is Ukrainian filmmaker Oleg Sentsov, who was sentenced to 20 years in a strict penal colony in Siberia on trumped-up terrorism charges. 2

Occupying foreign territory
Sentsov is one of at least 10 Ukrainian nationals serving long sentences in Russia who were arrested after Russia annexed Crimea in 2014 and started sponsoring rebels in eastern Ukraine. The Kremlin-backed protracted conflict, Europe’s “forgotten war,” is is in its third year, and has claimed nearly 10,000 lives.

On Dec. 14, German chancellor Angela Merkel and French president François Hollande said that they favored continuing sanctions on Russia, after the peace talks on Ukraine failed to produce tangible results. However, a day earlier, Trump’s chief-of-staff pick, Reince Priebus, said he would not rule out lifting US sanctions on Russia.

If sanctions are lifted, oil giant ExxonMobil could gain billions of dollars in deals. Trump’s pick for secretary of State is Exxon CEO Rex Tillerson.

Quashing opposition
Putin has run the country for 17 years as prime minister and president. In 2008, Russia extended presidential terms from four to six years; the next election is in 2018.

Russia has suppressed political opposition using an arsenal of techniques. These range from laws limiting free assembly and other civil rights 3, to jailing protestors for vague offenses such as “hooliganism,” to using the notoriously corrupt courts to convict opponents of embezzlement or tax fraud, to straightforward police intimidation, as well as murder. Prominent opponents have been forced into silence or exile.

Putin’s biggest challenger right now is Alexei Navalny, a lawyer and anti-corruption activist who announced on Dec. 13 that he would run for president in 2018. He has faced several criminal charges and received a suspended sentence for embezzlement, overturned after international outcry. He is due for a re-trial, however, and if found guilty, won’t be able to run for office. His brother Oleg is in prison after being sentenced in the same trial.

Masha Gessen pointed out in The New Yorker that Trump’s threat to imprison Hillary Clinton during the presidential campaign was reminiscent of how political opponents are most often silenced in Russia: not through outlawing them, but “abusing or misusing criminal laws.”

Abetting some of the world’s worst bloodshed
Seeking to gain influence, in the Middle East, Putin has supported the murderous regime of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad, in what has become the deadliest war of the 21st century so far. Russia’s military help has been priceless to Assad. Western powers and the UN accuse the alliance of indiscriminately targeting civilians.

In the recent siege and recapture of Aleppo by Assad and his allies, reports from the ground indicated Syrian forces were slaughtering civilian families. US ambassador to the UN Samantha Power said that Russia bears responsibility for the carnage along with the Assad regime and Iran: “Is there literally nothing that can shame you?,” she asked.

Meanwhile, according to an interview released by the Syrian government, Assad is hopeful about the next US administration. He called Donald Trump a “natural ally.”
gungasnake
 
  -3  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 04:12 am
@neptuneblue,
One word: Bullshit...
gungasnake
 
  -3  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 04:14 am
http://justfunfacts.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/cathedral-of-christ-the-saviour-1.jpg
0 Replies
 
gungasnake
 
  -4  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 04:16 am
songbird....

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C5KUkMkW8AMWO2P.jpg
0 Replies
 
Below viewing threshold (view)
gungasnake
 
  -3  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 04:23 am
0 Replies
 
neptuneblue
 
  6  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 04:24 am
@gungasnake,
Chris Wallace asked why Vladimir Putin’s critics end up dead. Here are the details

By Manuela Tobias on Thursday, July 19th, 2018 at 5:01 p.m.

Fox News host Chris Wallace pressed Russian President Vladimir Putin on the subjects President Donald Trump failed to bring up in an interview following the press conference.

Among those topics were the deaths, disappearances and attacks on multiple Putin critics under mysterious circumstances. Wallace said that when Putin was elected in 2000, he was portrayed as a democratic reformer, so he asked what had happened since.

"You say nothing happened to you, but I need to ask you, domestically, not internationally, domestically, inside Russia, why is it that so many of the people that opposed Vladimir Putin end up dead or close to it?"

Putin dodged the question, saying that everyone, including Trump, has political rivals, and pointed to the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., John F. Kennedy, and police violence in the United States.

We wanted to know: Do people who oppose Putin end up dead, or close to it?

Before launching into the novelesque crimes tied to the Russian state, we have to clarify that pinning anything specific on Putin is difficult. Harley Balzer, a professor of government affairs at Georgetown University who specializes in Russian and East European studies, attributed that to the KGB’s signature, or lack thereof: They leave no fingerprints.

"Many of us assume that some of the killings would have required Putin's (at least tacit) approval," Balzer said. "But no one has solid evidence."

Wallace named three victims of crimes that have been linked to the Kremlin, so we wanted to dig into the details. Below are the most prominent cases that Wallace mentioned, as well as journalists who have died.

Political opponents
Wallace mentioned Sergei Skripal, a former Russian spy who doubled as a spy for the British government. Skripal and his daughter were the victims of a nerve agent attack in England in March. The British government blames Russia for the attack, which Russia denies.

Wallace also mentioned Boris Nemtsov, a political star with presidential aspirations in the 1990s. Nemtsov supported Putin’s victory in 2000, but became an anti-Putin activist as his fellow young reformer increasingly curbed civil liberties. He was shot in 2015 the day before a march he organized to protest Russia’s economy and military involvement in Ukraine.

Alexander Litvinenko was a former Russian secret service agent. In November 1998, Litvinenko and other FSB officers accused their superiors of assassinating a Russian tycoon. Litvinenko was arrested and eventually had charges dismissed in 2000. Litvinenko was granted asylum in London, where he wrote two books accusing Putin of staging a terrorist attack linked to his rise to power and ordering journalist Anna Politkovskaya’s murder. He subsequently fell ill and died of radioactive polonium poisoning.

Journalists
In January 2016, we tallied journalists whose deaths were classified as homicides by authorities or watchdog groups since Putin assumed office in 2000. The updated count is 38.

(The tally only includes deaths confirmed or likely to be work-related homicides committed in Russia. It doesn’t include murders where the motives are unclear, or journalists killed in war and on other dangerous assignments, like covering the mob or riots.)

Here are some of the most famous cases.

Politkovskaya, who covered human rights abuses by the Russian military in Chechnya, was shot outside her apartment. While five men were convicted of her murder, the judge found it was a contract killing by an unknown person. The European Court of Human Rights determined the court "failed to take adequate investigatory steps to find the person or persons who had commissioned the murder."

Natalia Estemirova, who sometimes worked with Politkovskaya, covered abductions and murders in Chechnya until she became a victim herself. She was kidnapped on her way to work, shot and found in the woods near her home.

Anastasiya Baburova, another journalist, was shot and killed within walking distance of the Kremlin alongside Stanislav Markelov, a human rights lawyer representing Politkovskaya and other journalists critical of Putin.

Yuri Shchekochikhin, an investigative journalist and liberal lawmaker, investigated the Three Whales affair, a corruption scandal that implicated officers across Russia’s secret service. Days before his scheduled meeting with FBI investigators in 2003, Shchekochikhin died in his apartment from an unknown allergen. His medical documents were classified by Russian authorities.
0 Replies
 
neptuneblue
 
  4  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 04:26 am
@gungasnake,
I do have to give you some kind of credit though.

Searching through endless, mindless memes must be extremely tedious compared to actual fact based journalism.
0 Replies
 
maporsche
 
  3  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 05:08 am
@mysteryman841,
mysteryman841 wrote:

And of course the left blames every shooting on the NRA.
It doesn't matter who pulled the trigger, the left and its political allies always blame the NRA.


Can you point out where I blamed them?

I know you re-learned the quote button recently, but using simple " " will work for me here.
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  6  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 05:39 am
Why It Can Happen Here

Quote:
Soon after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a friend of mine — an expert on international relations — made a joke: “Now that Eastern Europe is free from the alien ideology of Communism, it can return to its true historical path — fascism.” Even at the time, his quip had a real edge.

And as of 2018 it hardly seems like a joke at all. What Freedom House calls illiberalism is on the rise across Eastern Europe. This includes Poland and Hungary, both still members of the European Union, in which democracy as we normally understand it is already dead.

In both countries the ruling parties — Law and Justice in Poland, Fidesz in Hungary — have established regimes that maintain the forms of popular elections, but have destroyed the independence of the judiciary, suppressed freedom of the press, institutionalized large-scale corruption and effectively delegitimized dissent. The result seems likely to be one-party rule for the foreseeable future.

And it could all too easily happen here. There was a time, not long ago, when people used to say that our democratic norms, our proud history of freedom, would protect us from such a slide into tyranny. In fact, some people still say that. But believing such a thing today requires willful blindness. The fact is that the Republican Party is ready, even eager, to become an American version of Law and Justice or Fidesz, exploiting its current political power to lock in permanent rule.

Just look at what has been happening at the state level.

In North Carolina, after a Democrat won the governorship, Republicans used the incumbent’s final days to pass legislation stripping the governor’s office of much of its power.

In Georgia, Republicans tried to use transparently phony concerns about access for disabled voters to close most of the polling places in a mainly black district.

In West Virginia, Republican legislators exploited complaints about excessive spending to impeach the entire State Supreme Court and replace it with party loyalists.

And these are just the cases that have received national attention. There are surely scores if not hundreds of similar stories across the nation. What all of them reflect is the reality that the modern G.O.P. feels no allegiance to democratic ideals; it will do whatever it thinks it can get away with to entrench its power.

What about developments at the national level? That’s where things get really scary. We’re currently sitting on a knife edge. If we fall off it in the wrong direction — specifically, if Republicans retain control of both houses of Congress in November — we will become another Poland or Hungary faster than you can imagine.

This week Axios created a bit of a stir with a scoop about a spreadsheet circulating among Republicans in Congress, listing investigations they think Democrats are likely to carry out if they take the House. The thing about the list is that every item on it — starting with Donald Trump’s tax returns — is something that obviously should be investigated, and would have been investigated under any other president. But the people circulating the document simply take it for granted that Republicans won’t address any of these issues: Party loyalty will prevail over constitutional responsibility.

Many Trump critics celebrated last week’s legal developments, taking the Manafort conviction and the Cohen guilty plea as signs that the walls may finally be closing in on the lawbreaker in chief. But I felt a sense of deepened dread as I watched the Republican reaction: Faced with undeniable evidence of Trump’s thuggishness, his party closed ranks around him more tightly than ever.

A year ago it seemed possible that there might be limits to the party’s complicity, that there would come a point where at least a few representatives or senators would say, no more. Now it’s clear that there are no limits: They’ll do whatever it takes to defend Trump and consolidate power.

This goes even for politicians who once seemed to have some principles. Senator Susan Collins of Maine was a voice of independence in the health care debate; now she sees no problem with having a president who’s an unindicted co-conspirator appoint a Supreme Court justice who believes that presidents are immune from prosecution. Senator Lindsey Graham denounced Trump in 2016, and until recently seemed to be standing up against the idea of firing the attorney general to kill the Mueller investigation; now he’s signaled that he’s O.K. with such a firing.

But why is America, the birthplace of democracy, so close to following the lead of other countries that have recently destroyed it?

Don’t tell me about “economic anxiety.” That’s not what happened in Poland, which grew steadily through the financial crisis and its aftermath. And it’s not what happened here in 2016: Study after study has found that racial resentment, not economic distress, drove Trump voters.

The point is that we’re suffering from the same disease — white nationalism run wild — that has already effectively killed democracy in some other Western nations. And we’re very, very close to the point of no return.
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  4  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 05:54 am
@gungasnake,
That's an example of the sort of ignorant homophobic bullying that caused a young lad to kill himself. If you had an ounce of humanity you'd be thoroughly ashamed of yourself, but all you've got, is prejudice, ignorance, hate and a disgusting religion.

izzythepush
 
  2  
Tue 28 Aug, 2018 06:39 am
Quote:
The British government has been accused of threatening a close ally in an increasingly bitter diplomatic tug-of-war over the fate of a tiny, strategic archipelago in the middle of the Indian Ocean.

The dispute over the Chagos Islands - home to the US military base on Diego Garcia - is being portrayed by some as an indication of Britain's waning influence on the world stage following the Brexit vote.

Next week the issue will come before judges at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague.

"We have had verbal threats," said the Prime Minister of Mauritius, Pravind Jugnauth, in an interview with BBC News.

He did not dispute a report that Britain's former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson had called him personally to pressure Mauritius to back down on its demand that the islands be returned after decades under UK control.

"Unfortunately, we have been threatened with retaliation… on issues of trade and on issues of investment, you know, and on our relationship with the UK," Mr Jugnauth added.


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-45300739

The US base of Diego Garcia is very significant strategically, very.
 

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