BREAKING: INVASION HAS BEGUN..... Putin's "3-day war"... NOW... 1 YEAR 338 DAYS ...WAGNER HEAD SAYS GROUP STANDING DOWN AFTER CLAIMS OF DEAL

This headline should've read..

Russia says parts of a Ukraine compromise deal are close...or

How to know when to hold em and when to fold em.

:lol:

If this is true...this is a huge failure on Russia's part.

Its a failure of the US to have given away 13 bullion fucking dollars for a half a country.
 


It is wild to see that several sober, intelligent people have reached the same conclusion. The next few days will be very interesting.



This seems 100% like posturing. I don't think Putin will use nuclear or biological weapons regardless of how bad it gets.

Can't confirm or refute any of this. That's what makes it all so aggravating. We may never even know if his bombs are headed our way. :dunno: o_O
 
The Russian invasion of Ukraine will cause shortages in developing nations already struggling with food insecurity, Rep. Austin Scott, R-Ga., warned during a House Armed Services Committee hearing Thursday.

Ukraine was the source of more than half the grain in the United Nations World Food Programme last year, Scott said, noting that Russia and Ukraine together accounted for 30 percent of global wheat exports.

“As this invasion continues, it’s more and more unlikely that Ukrainian farmers will be able to plant their crops, or fertilize their crops, or harvest their crops, or export any of this food supply into the world,” Scott said.

An official with the U.N. World Food Programme described it as “a catastrophe on top of a catastrophe,” he said.


:smh: :smh: :smh:
 

To think they asked this guy:

"Have you no sense of decency?"
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It is wild to see that several sober, intelligent people have reached the same conclusion. The next few days will be very interesting.



This seems 100% like posturing. I don't think Putin will use nuclear or biological weapons regardless of how bad it gets.


He knows this war ain’t going well and he knows there is growing threat in the military high command and Kremlin to take his ass out.

He got his family out of the reach of whoever got their eye on him and his family.

He knows the clock is ticking.
 
Somebody ain’t too happy…


'Scum and traitors': Under pressure over Ukraine, Putin turns his ire on Russians

One expert said the Russian leader was telling his country's elite: “Don’t think about having second thoughts. We’re all in this together, and if I go down, you go down.”

By Alexander Smith
March 17, 2022, 1:00 PM EDT


LONDON — Anyone looking for signs that embattled and isolated Russia might soften its position would not have found much hope in the increasingly belligerent words of President Vladimir Putin.

With his invasion of Ukraine floundering and his economy teetering, Putin doubled down Wednesday, turning his baleful glare on Russians who are against the invasion or who sympathize with the West.

"The Russian people will always be able to distinguish true patriots from scum and traitors and will simply spit them out like an insect in their mouth onto the pavement," he said, shoulders hunched and staring down the barrel of the camera.

It was the latest speech to surprise and alarm many who study Putin. He has adopted what they say is an emotional, ranting tone since Russia invaded Ukraine three weeks ago, a departure from the calculating persona of a former KGB officer.

"He's clearly angry, emotional and feels the need to speak in this very aggressive tone," said John Lough, an associate fellow at London’s Chatham House think tank.

Lough said the speech was clearly aimed at Russia's elites, some of whom he believes are privately dismayed about the failure of the war and the economic backlash it has inflicted at home.

According to Lough, Putin was saying to the elites: "Don't think about having second thoughts. We're all in this together, and if I go down, you go down."

Putin touched on now-common themes, comparing the West to Nazi Germany and alleging, against all evidence, that Ukraine has been committing genocide against ethnic Russians. But he adopted even more hard-line rhetoric when he turned his attention to Russians themselves, whom he has subjected to a sweeping crackdown on anti-war dissent in recent weeks.

Almost 15,000 protesters have been arrested in Russia since the war began, according to OVD-Info, a human rights group based in Moscow that tracks police detentions.

Unknown thousands more have fled the country, driven away by a deepening state repression of protest, independent journalism and social media, as well as a plummeting economy hit by international sanctions and mass boycotts.

The Kremlin said Thursday that it was those people who were showing themselves to be “traitors.”

“They vanish from our lives," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, according to Reuters. "Some people are leaving their posts. Some are leaving their active work life. Some leave the country and move to other countries. That is how this cleansing happens.

“In such difficult times," he added, "many people show their true colors."

Putin’s tone contrasted with those of the Russian and the Ukrainian negotiating teams, which signaled tentative progress in peace talks. Some experts saw his speech as a chilling sign.

“Putin in an Orwellian way has divided the citizens of Russia into clean and unclean,” Andrei Kolesnikov, a Moscow-based political analyst, said on Twitter.

Constanze Stelzenmüller, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, compared Putin’s speech to Adolf Hitler’s fictional tirade from the bunker in the 2004 film “Downfall,” whose subtitles have generated countless memes.

“Strrronngg ‘Der Untergang’ vibes here,” she tweeted, using the film’s German title.

Putin reserved special ire for Russian oligarchs, many of whom are Kremlin-linked billionaires who made their fortunes in the carve-up of the former Soviet Union and now spend much of it on yachts and other luxuries in the West. Some of them have recently broken cover and distanced themselves from Putin's war.

Without naming anyone specifically, Putin referred to "national traitors" who "have villas in Miami or the French Riviera, who cannot make do without foie gras, oysters or gender freedom, as they call it" — referring to his apparent disdain for liberal values.

He criticized their "servile mentality" of being too Western "in their minds, and not here with our people and with Russia."

Putin also called for “a natural and necessary self-detoxification of society,” which would “strengthen our country, our solidarity and cohesion.”

Much of the rest of Putin’s speech detailed the drastic economic countermeasures his government is introducing to combat sanctions and boycotts by Western governments and companies.

“Indeed, it is difficult for us at the moment,” he acknowledged.

Lough, who was the first NATO official posted to Moscow in the 1990s, said his contacts there are privately conveying “surprise, shock and disbelief that Russia" is engaged in the war.

There is now an “acceptance that this is going to usher in a period of extreme isolation of Russia, as well as impoverishment and a return, frankly, to many of the features of the Soviet Union,” he said.

putin-rage-052.jpg
 
Russia has been around for a thousand plus years…

When you back a man in the corner. M.A.D


Nuclear war in the 21st century would not be the end of Russia or the USA and certainly not mankind


Don't shoot the messenger but this was interesting read from someone who knows way more than me about nuclear weapons.
 
STILL DOING BUSINESS IN RUSSIA

AUTHENTIC BRANDS GROUP
REEBOK
CINNABON
CARVEL ICE CREAM
ACCOR
DECATHLON
HALLIBURTON
INTERNATIONAL PAPER

IPG PHOTONICS
KOCH INDUSTRIES
.... not surprised in the least by this :hmm:
LEROY MERLIN
LG ELECTRONICS
ORIFLAME COSMETICS
SCHLUMBERGER
SUBWAY
.... they had a nail in their coffin already with that fake tuna :itsawrap:



.sidebar: Cac .... cough ... Koch owns Brawny Paper Towels, Dixie cups, Quilted Northern Toilet Paper, Vanity Fair Napkins
 
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Ok…We gotta build that Wall ASAP!!!

HaHa!!!:cool:


UKRAINIANS TURNED AWAY AT SOUTHERN BORDER TRIGGER RENEWED CALLS TO END TRUMP-ERA IMMIGRATION POLICY

Lawmakers have called on the Biden administration to end Title 42.

By Anabel Munoz
Wednesday, March 16, 2022 6:51PM PT


LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- Attorney Blaine Bookey was at the Tijuana, Mexico port of entry as Ukrainian refugees were turned away by U.S. immigration authorities, including an 81-year-old grandmother and 2-year-old child.

"...told that our borders are closed, there are no exceptions, and that they will not be processed," said Bookey.

Bookey is the legal director of the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies. She successfully assisted a family that was initially denied. "A mother with her three children: 14, 12 and six that had fled just a few days after the invasion began," she said.

The challenges that family and other Ukrainians are facing at the U.S.-Mexico border is drawing renewed attention to Title 42. Under the Trump-era policy citing pandemic health concerns, immigration officials can - and do - turn away most families and adults seeking asylum without a chance to present their cases.

"We've seen hundreds of thousands of people expelled to Haiti and other countries and including right back across the border in Mexico, where their lives are at risk," she said.

Lawmakers have called on the Biden administration to end Title 42. In a statement, U.S. Senator Alex Padilla and fellow lawmakers said in part, "...With vaccines and testing widely available, there is no public health benefit to sending asylum seekers back to harm."

Bookey met a Haitian mother and 3-year-old daughter who were denied the opportunity to seek asylum. "Despite the many dangers that they face in Haiti and also in Mexico," said Bookey. "Their daughter has one of the worst skin infections I've ever seen. They've had difficulty diagnosing it," she added.

"It's very clear that the Title 42 policy, the intention of President Trump and his advisor Stephen Miller, was to keep out Black and brown asylum seekers that come to the U.S. southern border," said Bookey of the disparate application of the policy.

In the U.S., someone can legally seek asylum regardless of how they arrived or their current immigration status. For those Ukrainian refugees who do make it across the border, the L.A. County Board of Supervisors just unanimously approved a motion to provide them with financial aid, medical support, and immigration legal assistance. Families like Petro, his wife Olga, and their three children. "Our girls, all our children, were underground," Petro told Eyewitness News.

After spending days in a bomb shelter, they fled Ukraine and eventually made it to Tijuana and are now in Los Angeles. While their future is uncertain, their children and work are a priority. "If my children go to school, it's my best dream," he said. A dream that truly begins with first finding safety and refuge.

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