This Blog is created to stress the importance of Peace as an environmental directive. “I never give them hell. I just tell the truth and they think it’s hell.” – Harry Truman (I receive no compensation from any entry on this blog.)
Monday, July 25, 2022
Terror on Sunday Morning
Some areas of the country have less than $4.00 per gallon gas.
By Frank Witsil
Gas prices fell yet again (click here) - down 19 cents from a week ago, according to AAA — with Michigan drivers paying an average of $4.44 a gallon, an big drop from a month ago when gas was well over $5 a gallon.
"Michigan motorists have seen gas prices decrease 65 cents within the past month," Adrienne Woodland, a AAA spokeswoman, said Monday, adding that if demand remains low as supply increases, motorists "will likely see pump prices decline."
Gas is still $1.16 more than this time last year.
But one Biden senior official has predicted gas will eventually fall to about $4 a gallon nationally.
Motorists are now paying an average of $66 for a full 15-gallon tank of gasoline....
The US State Department needs to arrange for asylum.
By Zubaidah Abdul Jalil
"Good NIght, Moon"
The waning crescent
26.3 days old
11.3 percent lit
James Webb is worth it's weight in gold, literally and figuratively. It is sending back information about other galaxies. That is a good thing, because, I think Mars is old news and a new, young, livable galaxy is in order.
Sunday, July 24, 2022
The Russian language is used globally by people.
Vladimir Putin, on cue because the calendar said so, rolled his tanks into Ukraine. He sent troops to invade Chernobyl and then when their plans there fell apart because all the Russians were experiencing radiation sickness, they kidnapped scientists to run a lab in Belarus.
Putin's politics has become a genocide that encompasses not only the children and civilians of Ukraine, but, the global food chain that will cause food shortage and the suffering of starvation with people that don't even know where Russia is or how the president of Russia could hate them his much.
Victor Orban is not the man for the position of Prime Minister of Hungry. NATO needs to make that certain to the people of Hungry. NATO must end the propaganda about land that belongs to others as land to be annexed by Hungry.
DOES ANYONE HEAR THE RUSSIAN PLOT IN THAT BESIDES ME?
No NATO country is going to annex another NATO country's land. Out of the question and any tensions created by hate mongers like Orban need to be ratted out to the people. These are horrible men. Putin and Orban need to leave Ukraine and all other NATO countries' land alone. NOW!
Russia must stop it's aggression. There was never a valid reason for it besides Putin's guilt about the fall of the Soviet Union. He is not the president of the Soviet Union, he is the president, unfortunately, of Russia. Russia has no claim to Ukraine or any other Post-Soviet country.
The world has gotten to small for such nonsense. This is all nonsense and corruption. Russia believes it can walk into Ukraine because there is so much Russian corruption left over from Yanukovych that it looks like Russia's homeland corruption.
Turkey and Hungary need to get straightened out with open and fair elections and the DEPROGRAMING of the people.
As far as Trump? He needs to be charged with crimes against his own country. He is somewhat responsible for the instability that brought this about, but, Putin pulled the lever on a magical day on his desk calendar.
By the way, everyone in the USA knows McDonald's left Russia. I love that. But, what most Americans don't know is that the real estate was taken by the Russia government and given to somebody's brother to become a global oligarch selling hamburgers.
Well, Moscow Mitch won't get a chance to put Russian McDonald's in Kentucky because all the Russian customers have become sick. No lie. They are feeding people some kind of junk they want to pass off as hamburger or something. Putin keeps this up and the Russian people will be seeking refugee status asap.
July 6, 2022Russians took to Twitter and Telegram (click here) to post photos of moldy buns on their burgers from Russia's rebranded McDonald's, Vkusno i tochka, which translates to "Tasty and that's it."
The photos, which were sent in from subscribers to popular Telegram channels in Russia, mostly show food from the rebranded restaurants around Moscow. Vkusno i tochka opened in June after McDonald's sold its Russian franchises to Russian businessman Alexander Govor amidst the country's war in Ukraine. McDonald's first opened in Russia after the fall of the Soviet Union, and operated in the country for 30 years....
Stop allowing Russia to have it both ways!
A spokesperson for Russia’s Foreign Ministry (click here) said Sunday that Russian missiles destroyed military infrastructure Saturday in the Ukrainian Black Sea port of Odesa, a site that is vital for the exportation of Ukrainian grain.
Maria Zakharova posted on her Telegram account "Kalibr missiles destroyed military infrastructure in the port of Odessa, with a high-precision strike."
Russia earlier had denied any involvement in the Saturday strike that came a day after Russia and Ukraine had signed agreements allowing Ukraine to ship millions of tons of grain out of its Black Sea port.
It was not immediately clear what caused the reversal of facts from a Russian official.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy blasted Russia for jeopardizing the deal.
Zelenskyy said late Saturday in his daily address, “Today's Russian missile attack on Odesa, on our port, is a cynical one, and it was also a blow to the political positions of Russia itself. If anyone in the world could still say that some kind of dialogue ... with Russia, some kind of agreements are needed, see what is happening. Today's Russian Kalibr missiles have destroyed the very possibility for such statements.”...
Some casual reading about Hungry and it's wayward Prime MInister.
Maybe Orban wants to be charged with genocide for taking Putin's side? Yes? I am sure it can be arranged.
August 17, 2020Hungary’s democratic backsliding (click here) and increasingly nationalist rhetoric threatens the stability of the alliance. NATO needs to respond.
On June 6, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Órban visited a small town on the Hungarian-Slovak border to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Trianon. The agreement, signed in the wake of World War I, dramatically shrunk Hungary’s territory from its Austro-Hungarian empire borders, resulting in Hungary ceding two-thirds of its territory and leaving sizable populations of ethnic Hungarians outside of the new boundaries. In his speech, which was imbued with nationalist resentment, Órban described every Hungarian child inside and outside of the country’s borders as a “guard post” to protect national identity. Additionally, he boasted about the speed at which Hungary has increased defense spending and built “a new army,” proclaiming, “We haven’t been this strong in a hundred years.”...
Madrid - Turkey isn’t the only “problem child” of the NATO family at this year’s annual summit. (click here)
The Hungarian government is the lone objector blocking the establishment of a Center for Democratic Resilience within NATO, a yearslong effort by Rep. GERRY CONNOLLY (D-Va.), who serves as president of NATO’s Parliamentary Assembly.
It can sound like a tale out of the U.S. Senate, where one member can grind the chamber’s business to a halt. In NATO, all member-nations must consent to a decree in the Strategic Concept or expansion of the alliance. The center, as billed, would advise governments on best practices for maintaining and building a 21st-century democracy.
Hungary’s anti-democratic slide is no secret, so it’s not necessarily a surprise that its government is objecting to the creation of such an entity within NATO. VIKTOR ORBÁN, Hungary’s DONALD TRUMP-endorsed prime minister, has engineered crackdowns on the press and undermined election laws and the independent judiciary, leading critics to dub him an authoritarian.
“With the horror we’re witnessing in Ukraine, how could you not want to build democratic architecture within NATO to counter what we are experiencing in Ukraine?” Connolly told NatSec Daily here on day one of the summit. “You can’t argue the two aren’t related. Of course, they’re related. What do you think Putin is fighting against?”
Connolly, who leads what is effectively NATO’s legislative body, is pleading with Hungary to harken back to its roots — specifically, the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, which was an effort to push back against Soviet influence....
The Yeltsin eruption on December 5, 1994, made the top of the front page of the New York Times the next day, with the Russian president’s accusation (in front of Clinton and other heads of state gathered for a summit of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, CSCE) that the “domineering” U.S. was “trying to split [the] continent again” through NATO expansion. The angry tone of Yeltsin’s speech echoed years later in his successor Vladimir Putin’s famous 2007 speech at the Munich security conference, though by then the list of Russian grievances went well beyond NATO expansion to such unilateral U.S. actions as withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and the invasion of Iraq.
The new documents, the result of a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by the National Security Archive, include a series of revelatory “Bill-Boris” letters in the summer and fall of 1994, and the previously secret memcon of the presidents’ one-on-one at the Washington summit in September 1994....
To return to a sane moment.
The First Lady of Ukraine is not unreasonable. She is not asking for the end of the Russian people. She is asking to be protected from Russian missiles. That is not anything any governing body anywhere should refuse. The Ukraine people need to return to their homeland and resume their lives to rebuild their country. Russia's missiles are the only thing standing in their way.
Russia also MUST return all the children kidnapped by the country of Russia. THIS IS GENOCIDE, when children are removed from their homeland to be assimilated into a culture and country that is not their homeland.
THESE ARE NOT RUSSIA'S CHILDREN TO DO AS THEY PLEASE!
June 3, 2022By Anthony Deutsch and Stephanie van den Berg
The Hague - Prosecutors investigating war crimes cases in Ukraine (click here) are examining allegations of the forcible deportation of children to Russia since the invasion as they seek to build a genocide indictment, the country’s top prosecutor said in an interview.
International humanitarian law classifies the forced mass deportation of people during a conflict as a war crime. "Forcibly transfering children" in particular qualifies as genocide, the most serious of war crimes, under the 1948 Genocide Convention that outlawed the intent to destroy - in whole or in part - a national, ethnic, racial or religious group....
The reaction to Russia's unexpected and vicious aggression...
At present, NATO has 30 members. In 1949, there were 12 founding members of the Alliance: Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, the United Kingdom and the United States. The other member countries are: Greece and Türkiye (1952), Germany (1955), Spain (1982), the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland (1999), Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia (2004), Albania and Croatia (2009), Montenegro (2017) and North Macedonia (2020).
By Raul Gonzalez
Despite being geographically close (click here) Estonia and Russia have a fractious relationship, due in part to the former’s ties with the United States. In recent days the Estonian Defence Ministry has confirmed the purchase of a new weaponry system that will significantly bolster its armoury.
Estonia has bought a number of high-precision, long-range multiple launch rocket systems, with approval from US authorities, which will provide the small Baltic country with a defensive attack capacity.
Here is a little twist in the plot.
By Will Stewart
Putin looked awkward (click here) as he came down the steps of his presidential plane in Tehran but Ukrainian sources noted he moved unusually quickly and was more alert than in prior public appearances
A Ukrainian intelligence chief thinks Vladimir Putin may have used a body 'double' for his arrival at a summit in Iran this week.
Intelligence supremo Major-General Kyrylo Budanov was suspicious in a live interview on 1+1 channel, saying a Putin lookalike could have flown to Tehran to meet with the presidents of Iran and Turkey.
Erdogan has his own ally.
By Kemal Kirisci and Ilke Toygur
In July 2018, (click here) having triumphed in the presidential elections the previous month, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan began to formally transform Turkey’s long-standing parliamentary system into a heavily centralized presidential one. The new system entrenched his one-man authoritarian rule at home and is having profound implications for the making and substance of Turkish foreign policy as well as Turkey’s relations with the West. This transition has taken place amid an international environment that is undergoing a significant transformation. Today, the West is far from a shining “city on the hill,” attracting Turkey and other countries toward the liberal values it is meant to represent. Populism and nationalism are on the rise on both sides of the Atlantic. President Donald Trump’s “America First” policies are eroding the world order characterized by multilateralism, free trade, and advocacy of liberal values. The European Union is weakened internally by the challenge of Brexit and by diminishing public support for a liberal Europe comfortable with diversity. Complicating this picture are emerging powers such as China, Iran, and Russia that are playing a much more assertive role on the global stage.
July 23, 2022
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban (click here) has called on the United States and Russia to hold peace talks to end the war in Ukraine, adding that Kyiv cannot win against Moscow’s larger force.
During a July 23 speech delivered in neighboring Romania, Orban also criticized the European Union’s strategy of imposing sanctions on Russia for invading Ukraine, saying it is hurting the bloc.
"Only Russian-U.S. talks can put an end to the conflict because Russia wants security guarantees" only Washington can give, Orban said.
The United States and its Western allies were engaged in intense, monthslong negotiations with Russia over the Kremlin’s security concerns when President Vladimir Putin decided to invade Ukraine on February 24 on the false premise of protecting Russian-speakers in the Donbas.
A nationalist who has repeatedly clashed with the EU over his increasing authoritarian rule at home, Orban has been a thorn in the bloc’s side since the war began, undermining the image of a West completely united against Kremlin aggression....
Now that it is obvious Erdogan is playing both sides against the middle...
By Hueryra Pamuk and Anne Kauranen
President Erdogan of Turkey
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (click here) returned without any concrete results from talks with his Russian and Iranian counterparts in Tehran, to which he went with a thick dossier of bilateral problems. The many strains in Turkey’s ties with Russia and Iran remain unrelieved, and Erdogan’s quest for a green light for a new military intervention in Syria remains unanswered.
For Erdogan, the July 19 gathering held as part of the three-way Astana platform on Syria was a long-awaited face-to-face with Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Iran’s Ebrahim Raisi. Erdogan had repeatedly sought to host Putin in Turkey as part of his mediation efforts in the Ukraine war but to no avail. A preliminary deal reached last week on an export corridor for Ukrainian grain via Turkey paved the way for the two leaders’ meeting. And his plan for a bilateral visit to Tehran, mooted since December, had been postponed twice.
Several factors have strained ties between Turkey and Iran in recent times, atop their conflicting positions in Syria. Chief among them is the political impasse in Iraq, where they have backed rival blocs to form the government. Tensions in the Iraqi theater have stemmed also from influence wars in Kirkuk, Mosul and Tal Afar; Iran’s reproof of Turkey’s pursuit of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) on Iraqi territory; attacks on the Turkish base in Bashiqa by Iranian-backed militia groups; and their support for PKK-linked Yazidi forces in Sinjar. Meanwhile, a covert row has been brewing over potential Iraqi Kurdish gas exports via Turkey....
The word "peace" has a different meaning in the Russian language.
This has been the way Putin has handled any aspect of the invasion into Ukraine.
Well, that didn’t take long. (click here) On Friday, Russia’s defense minister raised a hungry world’s hopes by signing an agreement with the president of Turkey and the secretary general of the United Nations, according to which Moscow committed to facilitate resumption of large-scale grain shipments from Ukraine’s Black Sea ports. Russia had previously blockaded these, causing stress on global grain markets. Less than 24 hours later, on Saturday, Russian ships launched four long-range missiles at the largest of those ports, Odessa, two of which Ukrainian air defenses intercepted — and two of which caused some structural damage, though no destruction of grain or human casualties. The United States’ ambassador in Kyiv called the attack “outrageous,” which is an understatement.
Saturday’s events were not surprising to those familiar with President Vladimir Putin’s record, in this war and others. He is notorious for violating humanitarian agreements establishing safe “corridors” through which Russian forces and their allies herded Syrian civilians escaping war zones in that country....
Is it truly a beacon of hope?
The UN plan, (click here) which also paves the way for Russian food and fertilizer to reach global markets, will help to stabilize spiralling food prices worldwide and stave off famine, affecting millions.
Russian and Ukrainian Ministers signed the Black Sea Grain Initiative, facing each other at opposite ends of the table, while the Secretary-General and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan sat in the centre.
“Today, there is a beacon on the Black Sea,” the UN chief said, speaking prior to the signing. “A beacon of hope – a beacon of possibility – a beacon of relief -- in a world that needs it more than ever.”
Mr. Guterres thanked President Erdogan and his government for facilitating the talks that led to the deal.
He commended the Russian and Ukrainian representatives for putting aside their differences in the common interests of humanity.
“The question has not been what is good for one side or the other,” he said. “The focus has been on what matters most for the people of our world. And let there be no doubt – this is an agreement for the world.”...
There is no doubt that war is a horrible state of affairs.
By Julia Mueller
The volunteer soldiers were killed in the Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine on July 18, reportedly ambushed by Russian tanks, their commander Ruslan Miroshnichenko confirmed to Politico Sunday.
Young was born in 1971 and was an “American military man” who went to fight in Ukraine because he “took an oath to protect the free world,” Miroshnichenko told Politico.
Canadian Emile-Antoine Roy-Sirois and Swede Edvard Selander Patrignani were also killed while fighting with the special ops unit of the Territorial Defense of the Armed Forces of Ukraine....
How is everyone tonight?
Margaret Brennan (click here) is correct, there aren't enough hours in the day to report all the news.
I think it is a shame Donald John Trump ever made it to the presidency. He never EARNED it. President Biden earned it after decades of dedication to the USA and a resume of legislative achievements he more than earned it. His life is one of being mended all the time. But, that is sometimes the way of the Middle Class. It is the great sponge to everything that Wall Street never gets right. He has had incredible loss in his life as well. Few people would come out the other side of such loss and still have a level headed approach to the world.
There are reasons for the enormous flux in the world. I think the USA is not feeling the pains more than most of the rest of the world. It is a difficult time to be here on Earth, yet alone try to prosper in a global balance that has been turned on it's head.
I think I want to take a look at these things this evening.
It is time to file charges against Donald John Trump.
I find the reaction of United States Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley's to being told there is an assault at the US Capitol very telling.
DOD Staff - "General Milley, there is an assault at the US Capitol.'
General Milley - "No call. There is no call?"
Add that to all the testimony gathered by the January 6th Committee and there is profound proof that there wasn't just a disconnected president in the Oval Office dining room, there was a man named Donald John Trump sulking because he wasn't at the Capitol to complete a coup.
At every level of the government, including the DOD, there were alarm bells regarding the insurrection. There is no doubt anywhere and there are Americans dead.
Because the insurrection failed is not a reason to think the country is secure from these extremists that see Russia as an ally.
July 21, 2022By Nicole Gaudiano
"You're the commander in chief," he said during closed-door testimony. "You've got an assault going on on the Capitol of the United States of America.
"Nothing? No call? nothing? Zero?"
The National Guard wasn't approved to respond until about 3 p.m. that day and did not arrive on the scene until 5:40 p.m....
The insurrection was more than Trump speaking up.
Listening to the staff in testimony to the January 6th Committee focused on what was in their power to do to stop the violence. But, in fact it was much more that was within the power of the presidency that could have been done. At the time Trump was relishing the violence and anticipating it's success, former Vice President Pence was calling the national guard. THAT is what Trump should have done and not just make a statement from the Rose Garden.