Making Sense of “The Fatherland”


Posted originally on the CTH on June 21, 2024 | Sundance 

A Russian person could not visit New York, Chicago and Los Angeles and then say they visited The United States and have an understanding of Americans.  They might think they understand, but any American would giggle at the notion.

Conversely, the same is true in Russia.  You cannot visit Moscow, St Petersburg and Kazan and think you have an understanding of Russians.  However, if you give yourself time, join in the daily tasks and challenges of ordinary Russians, you can easily discover some of the deeper stuff that really puts context on life in the Russian Federation.

Perhaps what follows is a different perspective.

It took a while, but I finally figured out what this phrase “the fatherland” is all about.

Let me start by sharing another phrase that almost every American will find familiar, yet virtually every Russian asked has no reference to comprehend: “you work for us.”

When talking to a federal, state or local government official in the United States and saying, “you work for us,” everyone listening would completely understand your sentiment.  However, in Russia that phrase is akin to asking a Martian for a canoe.   This is the way to understand “the fatherland.”

Within Russia the social compact is organized around the premise (key word “premise“), that government is the father figure within a family – and all of the citizens are children.   The government knows best.  The state engages in all facets, systems and structures as if they are the omnipotent father who cares about the children.

The people of Russia generally accept this system.  Generations and generations of compliant, well behaved, very structured and regimented ideology still permeates.  The muscle memory is deepest in the psychological muscles that run through generations.

Oddly, this social compact is understood, but only understood insofar as the Russian people do not have any other reference point, or alternative system that would enable them to see the deficit in the oppressive system that surrounds them.

The average Russian knows the “West” is different but doesn’t really know why the social system they see outside their window seemingly operates with well-organized randomness.  What is this efficiency within unbridled capitalism you speak of, and why would Americans be willing to give it up?

Karelia Russia, early spring ’24

♦ As stated previously, the level of social compliance within the fatherland compact is stunning.  Some observers might brush off extreme lawfulness as a remnant of strict authoritarianism – decades of hardcore soviet influence.  From that perspective, yes being an invisible “grey man” is safe; drawing attention to yourself can only bring the glare of Father. It is safer to be a generic sardine in a school of sardines.

Live within that system long enough, and it just becomes the natural way it is.  It doesn’t matter what the uniform rule is, generally Russians act with extreme compliance.

Standing in line, waiting for the light at a crosswalk, standing on the right side of the escalator, remaining stoic, “cultured” and “not vulgar” in a subway or public venue, putting your trash in an often-changed public receptacle, appropriate (quiet) use of the cell phone, the odd lack of talking in just about any venue, all the way to accepting ridiculous outcomes as a matter of engagement with the fatherland bureaucracy.

The customs and norms circle around ordinary compliance and social acceptances, learned behaviors over time, and so they do.  Note, in part this behavior pattern makes it very easy to spot a non-Russian.  [That is also one of the reasons why I was careful about taking ordinary photographs, especially considering there are literally no tourists.]

From the 30,000 ft level, generally speaking, somewhere above 85% of the Russian population are compliant children, very well behaved with low expectations of anything in life that is not ordinary.  That larger part of Russia accepts their malaise as just “life,” and they move along.  The other 15% are part of the social strata (government worker or connected to a higher status), that affords them additional benefits.

St Petersburg, Russia – Spring ’24

Yes, there are definitely two castes or classes within the population, and this is a self-fulfilling prophecy, something the intellectual left in the United States will always deny.  Totalitarianism is on the far-left side of the political continuum. Within that leftist system, a process the USA is working toward, there are ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ – or what is more familiarly called “elites.”

Have you ever visited Disney or a theme park in the USA where you can purchase a higher priced ticket to go into a “fast lane” at each attraction?  The average price visitor stands in one long line, those who pay a much higher price get to skip to a much shorter line.  In Russia, that’s the analogy for the general population engaging in everything; literally everything in their life from shopping to where they live, the better system experience is based on wealth & status.

♦ There is no part of this social system that an average American would enjoy in the long-term.  Do not romanticize Russia.  Edward Snowden gave up his best life when he made his hard choices.

Put simply, ordinary life as an ordinary Russian is just not easy.  The concept of a social system structured around liberty and self-determination is unknown.  Russians are not “free” people, not even close.  I

t is not uncommon to see police on foot, regular beat cops, on crowded streets stopping people and asking for “their papers.”  I am told the people being stopped are clearly not native Russians; but honestly, I watched this take place several times, and they all look Russian to me.

As I walked in the crowd with my friends, I asked them, “Do I look Russian”, because I was not being asked for my papers.

The response was generally that I look “white”, and the people being stopped by the police were not white.  However, again I repeat, everyone being stopped looked like a white Russian to me, so what do I know.

There were also a few seemingly random road checkpoints where you are stopped by police and asked for your papers when driving, or a passenger.  This always made me nervous (and my friends, although they were embarrassed to admit it), and with my passport I was always questioned and checked closely (but never detained – except as previously noted in the airport).

On the overall social oppression aspect, yes there are signs the Russian government is trying to change, to figure out a middle ground.  However, the default position of the social mechanism is set to strict control, oppressive govt and authoritarianism.

Step out of the sardine line, and you will end up regretting it – big time.  Ordinary Russians do not want to step out of line.

The problem for the Russian government is the generational compliance system does not create forward-thinking, independent thinking or entrepreneurship at the scale needed (Western scale) to rapidly advance modern society or keep up with technological changes and advancements. The DNA of Russia is static, lacking innovation, and built on this system of compliance.

On one hand, too many grey people, not enough independent thinkers…. that appears to be part of the problem in Russia.  Hence, the government has all kinds of financial and economic incentives for innovative Western tech people and businesses to emigrate.  However, on the other hand the government likes the domineering social compliance aspect, so they face recruitment problems.

Socially, the extreme compliance creates unity, cohesion and lawfulness.  However, that same permeating mindset chokes out innovation and independent critical thinking.  The lack of home-grown innovation, meaning the people who actually think independently, means the industrial and tech business sectors must steal their ideas from other places.  It is not accidentally the same in China.  I think this is also why Russian hacking is so advanced.

The current/modern Russian government seems to hate the social wokeism stuff, within the “West,” more than they like innovation in a free-thinking capitalist society.  As a consequence, Dear Father is not willing to allow his apples to fall away from the tree.

♦ The Western financial sanction regime against Russia has driven the Russian economy into a very close relationship with China, South Korea and larger Association of Southeast Asia Nations (ASEAN).  The new automobiles in Russia are almost all Kia, Hyundai and then Chinese models.  The Russians notably do not have many EVs; they are mostly standard internal combustion engines.  There are some newer USA and EU import vehicles, but those carry the cost of the 3rd party brokers (super high prices afforded only by the elites).

The odd thing about the sanction regime is the invisibility of it, unless you are looking deeply.  Sure, many western retail companies were forced to leave by Western political demand, but their products are still mostly available.  I cannot visibly see any segment of the Russian economy where the sanctions are having a strong impact.  Quite the opposite is true, and all outward appearances of the Russian economy look strong.

Again, in a general sense, because Russia lacks innovative capitalism, their infrastructure innovation is archaic and outdated.  This does not mean the old infrastructure is necessarily broken or doesn’t work; it only means it is old and very odd to see.   Russia spends a lot of time cleaning and maintaining its infrastructure, but large sections of housing developments and apartments are very old and look well past their use-by dates.

Analog is still everywhere; digital systems have yet to become mainstream.  If you step outside the center-city tourist perspective, you enter the 1970’s or 1980’s system in the suburbs dominated by the sardine cans where people live.  As a person who was born/raised like Huck Finn in Florida on the beaches, islands and backwater bayous, the stacked-up rows and rows of sardine can apartments is seriously wild and simultaneously “yikes.”

The sardine Russians enjoy their parks, and to be fair they have some really nice spring and summer parks to enjoy, provided and maintained by Dear Father.  On nice weather days, the benches are full of people quietly talking to one another, enjoying the fellowship outdoors and generally being well cultured and exceptionally civil.

Random park in center city, St Petersburg, Russia

The well-mannered expectations of social rules, within the suburban and city park system, were explained to me, and I did not see a single reference of non-compliance or crude behavior anywhere – not even once.  NOT ONCE.

Truthfully, it’s really weird how quiet and stoic the Russian people are when they are enjoying their recreation time.  It’s like something out of a 1950’s pod-people movie, and after a while I found it to be very disconcerting, almost bordering on annoying for some reason.

I woke up early and hiked up to that specific and beautiful hilltop in Kareila, Russia, just so I could record that train video.  No one else was on the mountain. It was a cold and beautiful morning.

♦ Food and Diets – Russian people eat well, and generally you would say they eat healthy fresh food.  Because he was apparently concerned about it at some point, Dear Father banned Canola oil in Russia as a food additive.  Fresh foods are what the average American would consider “organic foods.”  For those of you who grow in your own gardens, you understand what the food markets are like in Russia.

This is not to say Russians are “healthy,” because overall they might not be.  Smoking cigarettes and heavy alcohol drinking are very visible, and the difference in appearance between a 20-year-old and a 40-year-old is striking; perhaps that’s why.

Good quality food is cheap in Russia.  Everything you see on the counter in this picture (left) was purchased for less than $70.  I transposed the prices that I would pay at my local grocery store in the USA, and I came up with around $150-$175.

Processed food prices in Russia (crackers, chips, candies, cereals) generally are about half of what you would pay in the U.S.  However, on the fresh foods side (produce, fish, meats, dairy), the Russian prices are a fraction of the U.S.A costs.

[10 eggs for $0.50, bread $1, bananas $0.05/lb, salmon $2.00, head lettuce $0.50, berries less than $1, apples $0.45/lb, steak $2/lb, ground chuck $1.50/lb, etc]

A 30-mile cab ride is around $5 to $8, and gasoline costs less than $2/gal.

A typical “nice” restaurant meal for 2 people is around $15.00, and you can easily grab a burger and fries for $3/$4 at any fast-food place.  The average rent for a 1-bedroom apartment (city or suburb) is around $300/mo.  The average income of a middle class (blue collar) worker is around $1,000/month.

Those grab-n-go electric scooters and electric bicycles are well used in the Russian cities and cost around $1 for an hour (kinda cool, and yeah I used them).

Keep in mind, during the soviet era religion was essentially forbidden.  As a consequence, the Christian calendar within economic life (something you don’t think about in the USA) was erased.

In the USA the typical work week, Monday to Friday 9-5 weekends off, was an outcome of Christianity in the economy.  In Russia you can get a dental appointment at 8:00pm on Sunday, or a haircut at any random time of day.  All of the private sector businesses operate based on paying customer needs, not the social economic history of church attendance or worship schedules.

You can open a bank account in Russia using a passport, you do not need to live in Russia to open a bank account.  Almost everything in “modern Russia” is done through your phone number and apps.  On the downside, I have no doubt Dear Father monitors all of the connected activity on the phone number.

FYI, there are no sanctions on telecommunications, and USA issued cell carriers operate reciprocity systems in Russia.

Instagram, Facebook, Rumble and all pornography sites are blocked on Russian internet, but people use VPN’s.  However, before you think it’s big government remember, the number of sites blocked by Russia is less than the number of Russian web sites and domain IDs blocked by the USA govt.

If your Internet Service Provider (ISP) carries a Russian identifier, about half the USA websites will block it, including President Trump’s Truth Social platform.  This happens in cell phone networks and targeted apps also.  I find this to be very troublesome, because communication is critical to avoiding conflict.  The “West” and Russia are building walls around their internet protocols making it harder for Americans and Russians to talk to each other.   I do not think this is good.

♦ Healthcare – Russian healthcare is very cost efficient, and the system of healthcare itself is really cool.  This is one element where you could say Russian outcomes easily exceed the USA.  Healthcare for the average Russian is free; essentially, socialized medicine paid via taxes.  However, yes there is a private sector healthcare system available for those who want to pay for extra stuff.

Dental is a good example to give you an idea of costs.  You can get braces in Russia for less than $1,000 (generally $500).  Standard dentists visit for cleaning around $20.  That cost ratio carries throughout the general healthcare system that is remarkably modern, although if you need a specialized test like a CAT scan ($75), PET scan ($200) or MRI ($100/$150) you need an appointment at a govt institution (although, super-efficient timelines there too).

Within private sector healthcare, I’m told medical tourism used to be a big thing with people traveling to Russia for low-cost high-quality healthcare. I can see why.  I went on several visits to healthcare providers, and the in/out efficiency within both the govt and private sector was impressive.  You can also purchase just about all prescription medications (except narcotics classed meds) without a prescription at pharmacies (that are seemingly everywhere like convenience stores).

♦ The Russian Federation, at least through the prism of life as an ordinary Russian (generally middle class/worker class), is not really close to the portrayal that we see about it through Western media.

Russia is a beautiful country; it is massive and filled with natural resources.  From the landscape beauty and natural resource perspective, it is similar to the United States in many ways, but the USA is better.  Culturally, there is a big difference between the USA and Russia, some of the differences may be considered good, some of them not good depending on what point exactly we were discussing.

I can see how a very specific type of rugged individualist person may enjoy living in Russia more than the USA.  In a place where you are disconnected from the modern world and far away from the urban city centers; you can do just about anything you want in Russia – yes, even beyond what is possible in the United States.  However, on the aggregate, the ordinary life of the average MAGA American is far superior in quality than the ordinary life of the average Russian.

The opportunities to improve your independent life in the USA are present and within reach.  Those same opportunities are not easily found as an independent person in Russia.

When the innovative DNA is triggered in a Russian person, they are inherently compelled by disposition and expressive need to leave the federation.  That dynamic is the irony you will find buried deep under the surface, and for very obvious reasons it is the one dynamic the Russian government will not discuss.

If you were to ask me what is the “one thing” I think that will culturally change Russia, you just read what I think it will be in that prior paragraph.

Feel free to use this discussion thread as an ‘Ask Me Anything’ about my time visiting Russia, and I will try to answer as best possible.

Love to all….

The Traitor Waving Ukrainian Flags on the House Floor Should be Removed from Office


Posted originally on May 1, 2024 By Martin Armstrong 

President Theodore Roosevelt made it perfectly clear

Anyone who has any allegiance to a flag OTHER THAN American has no business being in public office and should be removed forthwith!!!!!!!!!!!

Roosevelt Teddy Imigration

Happy New Year from the AE Team!


Posted originally on Jan 1, 2024 By Martin Armstrong 

happynewyear2024

As the year comes to a close, we want to express our deepest gratitude for your continued support and engagement with our blog.

May the upcoming year be filled with new opportunities, strategic breakthroughs, and successful trades. Together, let’s navigate the intricate landscape of financial trends with confidence and precision. We look forward to providing you with cutting-edge insights and tools to enhance your financial endeavors.

Happy New Year from the entire Armstrong team!

A New Year Awaits – 2024 Will Be as Awesome as We Create


Posted originally on the CTH on December 31, 2023 | Sundance


2023 has been one heck of a ride.  I mean, wow.

This is the year when so many assumptions collapsed because we did not pretend. I will have other thoughts on the year upon better reflection, even some predictions that might seem a little “out there”.  Then again, I’m not exactly known for following the herd safety formula.

However, as the eve winds down, and as we are given to considering everything that has taken place, a revisit to the spiritual core of our association is appropriate.

For me, this year provided many memorable gifts; almost all were driven by a purposeful God reminding me to keep poking my head into the human mechanics of common presumptions.  Nothing is more empowering than listening to His message, being completely lost yet jumping on faith, and then finding out the wow; why it was necessary to put prayer in front of fear.

Yup, we are about to walk into entirely new challenges.  Perhaps we are not prepared, perhaps we will all test our faith, perhaps we will discover new limits to our exhaustion, perhaps we will discover we are much stronger than we realize.  One of the reasons for my optimism is that I think the latter is assured.

I believe we are stronger than we give ourselves credit for.  I believe YOU are stronger, more purposeful, smarter, more strategic, more influential, more necessary and far more loved than you can ever imagine.

Yes, I am stunningly optimistic, much more so today on the last day of 2023, than I was on the first day.  The knowledge we possess is powerful – far more powerful than the pretenses we fight against.

Regardless of how we exit this year, excited or slightly nervous, we must admit it can be challenging to retain a joyful ‘best life’ while everything around us seems created to deliver ultimate chaos and madness.

However, if we accept that a loving God is the source of the purest truth, we can create something stronger within ourselves just by making a choice.   Do that, choose that, follow that and we will have accomplished a great deal.

Regardless of what tomorrow brings, we always have choices.  A new year’s perspective:

I have long felt that life is like a series of links in a chain. You might be driving down the road and you hear a song on the radio, or see a picture, and you feel a memory….

Something triggers within you that reminds of a different time and place than where you are right now.

You reflect.

The memories you consider remind you of a totally different time in your life.

Perhaps you lived in a different place.  Perhaps you were surrounded by different people. Perhaps a different job or completely different friends. You recognize those memories were constructed like frozen moments in time.  They became individual links in the chain in your life.

We never actually realize, in the immediate moment, when one link closes and another link begins. But when we look back, we can clearly see distinct points where things changed, the link closed, and a new link began.

You see, the links are only visible in reflection.

As we reflect, we find parts of the chain in our life where each link closes and connects with the other. A beginning, and an end. At the point where the links are joined, we carry parts of the previous link forward to the next.

For many people those connections are bonded by family, or very strong lifelong relationships. Connections which continue beyond our geographic moments, jobs or temporary acquaintances.

But for everyone, the primary bonding agent brought forward from one link to the next is us, our center, our values and core principles. Our beliefs.

The strength of the steel which comprises the links of our life is forged in the fire of adversity, weakness, challenge, pain, loss, and painful growth. The steel is then cooled with the tears of triumph, hurdles overcome and resolve.

The forging makes the steel stronger and able to withstand the pressures that accompany the additional length. Slowly the chain becomes wiser as it lengthens. Able to reach further, form more significant benefits and become more useful.

Hope replaces fear. Love replaces loneliness. Success replaces adversity. These are successful links began and finished while contributing to the whole.

At times we may manipulate the links with avoidance. We hide from -or choose to avoid- an issue in our effort to begin a new link before the old one was naturally, and spiritually, prepared to be closed.

Eventually, as life continues and the chain lengthens, the weak link can fracture, and we are forced to revisit/repair what we originally chose to avoid.

You see, in life we cannot control the universal laws that guide us. So, if we manipulate circumstances to avoid confronting our own weakness, we cannot fully strengthen our life of links. Eventually, the weakness of our past will impact our future.

So, what principles do we carry from link to link? What core values and beliefs stay with us throughout the journey of our lives? The answers to these questions are what makes us human spiritual beings.

We possess free will able to make choices about what we do, and how we define our individual humanity; but can we then define ’right’ and ‘wrong’ according to our individual principles? Or are there principles that exceed our influence and definition?

Are there natural laws of right and wrong, good and bad, that cannot be subjected to the determination of man?

These are the bigger questions, perhaps the more important questions; and yet, perhaps the ones we reflect upon the least.

Consider the example of the ‘Law of the Farm’ vs. the ‘Law of the School’. Natural principles vs. those made by man.

A student can skip class, take few notes, pay only half attention, then stay up all night cramming for a test and manage a decent grade. It depends on the student’s goal: grades or learning.

The student can choose to manipulate the education, by avoiding the learning and capturing the grade. This is possible in the ‘Law of the School’.

However, a farmer cannot take short cuts. A farmer cannot avoid tending to the soil, preparing the seed, fertilizing and nurturing the crop, and still gain the benefit of an abundant harvest.

The farmer must necessarily do all of the appropriate work in order to benefit from it. Such is the ‘Law of the Farm’, the natural law.

When one considers the weakness remaining within a poorly constructed and manipulated link, perhaps established by selfish choices and driven by avoidance and fear, one can be faithfully assured those who have dealt dishonestly with us will have to visit the issues of their association again.

Conversely, no amount of manipulation or avoidance on our own behalf is going to improve the frailty of any link without first resolving the lack of character which created the weakness.

So, we have choices in our lives. Decisions we each make regarding how we interact and participate in the lives and links of others, as well as how we choose to construct the links that comprise our own lives.

Do we base our sense of purpose around natural principles? Principles based on natural laws of right and wrong, good and bad, truth and lies.  Do we forge strong links by following our heart, our values?

If we can interact with others absent of a prideful self-driven agenda, or manipulative intent, we can then apply such principles and strength to our endeavors.

If we protect the integrity of the soil upon which we build the foundation of our lives, we can live without regret.

If we fertilize and cherish our crop, and the crop of our neighbor, with honesty and sincere appreciation for the souls we meet along our chosen path, we will live a life of abundance.

If we tend carefully to the consideration of everyone, yet holding true to our values and principles, we can strengthen ourselves amid the face of adversity and disenchantment.

If we do not hide from, nor ignore our individual and collective faults, we can build the chain of our life with strength, humility, and purpose.

I wish for each of you a long chain of bold, strong, beautiful links, polished with the reflective brilliance of Love, and the very happiest of blessings for a brand-New Year.

Abiding love to all.

Steadfast,

Sundance

…Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.

Robert Frost

Wait, Shenna Bellows Said What?…


Posted originally on the CTH on December 28, 2023 | Sundance

No commentary needed:

[SOURCE LINK]

TMobile Provides Government Access to Your Texts


Posted originally on Dec 28, 2023 By Martin Armstrong 

SHAFT

(Click on above image for clear resolution)

TMobile now has the authority to read your personal text messages. The mobile provider quietly updated their terms of conditions to monitor SHAFT (sex, hate, alcohol, firearms, and tobacco). The list of questionable categories may now be monitored by the Cellular Telephone Industries Association (CITA) as we move closer to full totalitarianism.

Other companies, such as AT&T, have a long history of partnering with the US government to enable backdoor access into their systems. Warrants are no longer required for investigations as EVERYONE is seen as a potential criminal. Violations could come with a fine of up to $2,000.

Surveilence

The government has the moral authority to tell us what is considered “hate speech.” Conservatives will be targeted. As we have seen countless times in Biden’s America, anyone who questions his administration is censored, deplatformed, or fined. MAGA supporters have been deemed the most dangerous domestic terrorist group in the nation by the standing [often falling] president. Have an issue with vaccines or COVID? Planning to attend a rally for Trump’s re-election? Upset by the blatant sexualization of youth and dismantling of the family unit? Disagree with Bidenomics? Well, if you answered yes to any of these, you may be in violation of the law beginning on January 1, 2024.

This may be one of the largest abuses of power since the Patriot Act. Clearly, they are implementing this ahead of the 2024 US Presidential Election, as we will see massive civil unrest as we head into the new year.

Biden Admin Announces Release of Additional $250 Million in Ukraine Funding – Plus Some Other Less Noticed Stuff


Posted originally on the CTH on December 27, 2023 | Sundance

An interesting set of details amid a few reports on Ukraine, with one very interesting White House announcement under section 621 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (FAA).

First, as previously discussed within the year-end National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) there was a supplemental addition of $300 million more for Ukraine.

(VIA CBS) – The Biden administration Wednesday announced a $250 million military assistance package for Ukraine.

The aid package — the final of 2023 — will include arms and equipment, including air defense munitions, anti-armor munitions, ammunition for high mobility artillery rocket systems, and more than 15 million rounds of small arms ammunition, a State Department spokesperson said to CBS News.

“Our assistance has been critical to supporting our Ukrainian partners as they defend their country and their freedom against Russia’s aggression,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement, urging Congress to “swiftly” approve further aid to Ukraine. (read more)

Then, there’s something rather interesting….

Remember how we’ve talked about Ukraine being somewhat of a money laundering operation; and the entire series of events being akin to “world war Reddit” without any visible ‘boots on the ground’ war correspondent reporting; and the highly visible structure of the CIA running the operation from Foggy Bottom with the Dept of State controlling the outcomes… Remember all that?

Now, check out this little slush fund:

WHITE HOUSE – “By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including section 621 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (FAA), I hereby delegate to the Secretary of State the authority under section 614(a)(1) of the FAA to determine whether it is important to the security interests of the United States to furnish up to $20 million in assistance to Ukraine without regard to any provision of law within the purview of section 614(a)(1) of the FAA.” (link)

Who/what is that $20 million for?

Curiousor and curiousor….

POLITICO – “With U.S. and European aid to Ukraine now in serious jeopardy, the Biden administration and European officials are quietly shifting their focus from supporting Ukraine’s goal of total victory over Russia to improving its position in an eventual negotiation to end the war, according to a Biden administration official and a European diplomat based in Washington. Such a negotiation would likely mean giving up parts of Ukraine to Russia.

The White House and Pentagon publicly insist there is no official change in administration policy — that they still support Ukraine’s aim of forcing Russia’s military completely out of the country. But along with the Ukrainians themselves, U.S. and European officials are now discussing the redeployment of Kyiv’s forces away from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s mostly failed counteroffensive into a stronger defensive position against Russian forces in the east, according to the administration official and the European diplomat, and confirmed by a senior administration official.

This effort has also involved bolstering air defense systems and building fortifications, razor wire obstructions and anti-tank obstacles and ditches along Ukraine’s northern border with Belarus, these officials say. (MORE)

So, the official narrative has shifted from ‘winning‘ to ‘stalemate‘ to the more recent, ‘lose less’ and prepare for “giving up parts of Ukraine to Russia.”

Hmmm… What’s the DoS/CIA extra $20 million for, again?

Comrade Suspicious Cat remains, well, suspicious….

Trump Files OPENING BRIEF; Maine’s “MANDATORY” Removal; Jack Smith Can Go To…


Posted originally on Rumble By Robert Gouveia on:Dec 26, 5:00 pm EST

House Minority Leader Says Democrats Will Never “Yield” Power


Posted December 26, 2023 | Sundance | 361 Comments

Yeah, well, if you want to understand the ideology of the leftists, communists and facists, look no further than this proclamation from House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries:

[Source]

This is a completely loaded public declaration by the Democrat House Leader.

It goes without saying that mainstream media will ignore the extremism as presented, because that would involve an open admission that everything the Democrats accuse others of doing, including election denial, is exactly what Democrats do.

This statement from Hakeem Jeffries sounds a lot like David Plouffe and the “his kind” statement, because the expressed totalitarian ideology is exactly the same.

Revolution v Civil War


Posted originally on Dec 26, 2023 By Martin Armstrong 

Civil Unrest 2023

A revolution cannot be used interchangeably with “civil war.” For you see, a civil war occurs when the people are divided and fight one another; a revolution occurs when the people join forces and overthrow the government. As indicated in the Oxford dictionary:

Revolution – a forcible overthrow of a government or social order, in favor of a new system

Civil War – a war between citizens of the same country

Politics has successfully divided the nation, and the pandemic exacerbated the differences between the left and right. They have attempted to divide us by class – the haves and have-nots. We have the welfare state on one side and a select few amassing the majority of the world’s wealth on the other. The 99% in the middle are now fighting against one another, with some pushing for socialism to ensure we are all financially equally. As the saying goes, “You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it.”

Women Trump Protest Wall

They have attempted to divide us through religion, as we even saw Soros-backed protestors entering churches during services. Traditional values have been demonized by the left, who believes those wishing to preserve their way of life are outdated. The nuclear family, pillar to any religion and society as a whole, has been destroyed. Monogamy has fallen out of popularity and birth rates continually decline. People on the far-right do not want abortion under any circumstance or same-sex marriage. The people on the far-left believe children should have the authority to change their gender, and there are hundreds of genders to choose from.

transgenderaffirmingeducationLGBTQ

They have attempted to divide us through race. They implemented Critical Race Theory curriculum in the schools intended to create white guilt and anger among minorities. Kids don’t see race, but the schools ensure they do at a young age. Politicians on the left continually promise reparations, believing that people should pay for the misdoings of their ancestors even though only a tiny fraction of Americans had ancestors who owned slaves. The public school curriculum supports far-left ideologies and indoctrinates young minds to believe in a false reality.

SocialJusticeWarriorMurdered

We saw the rise of movements like Black Lives Matter, where it was permissible to burn down cities with no legal repercussions in the name of civil rights. Then we have a disproportionate of number of Blacks in our prisons due to laws that were intended to target them. We saw a rising wave of hate against Asians after China was blamed for spreading COVID to the world.

Speaking of COVID, the pandemic did more damage to divide our nation than anything in recent history. People were forcibly separated and forbid to socialize with their own families. Religion was not enough of an excuse to avoid the vaccine or attend religious services. Countless small businesses failed and people lost their jobs, contributing to the class warfare crisis. The unvaccinated were demonized as the biggest threat to the nation and there were calls for their extermination. Everyone was forced to choose a side amid the pandemic.

If the people were not divided, they would realize that government is pinning us against one another. The current administration took the Constitution and set it on fire. We are rapidly losing every single freedom from free speech, the right to bear arms, and even the most basic right to elect the people in positions of power who make decisions on our behalf. The government is the enemy – there will be a revolution once people realize their fellow neighbor is not the problem.

By the time we get to 2032, that will be the light at the end of the tunnel. Neither side will accept the results of the election if they bother to hold one at all. The USA will eventually break into three primary regions: 2) the South & Midwest Bible Belt will join together against, 2) the Northeast, and 3) the Pacific States will be their own la-la-land. The volatility will begin in 2024, but by 2032, the United States of America will be far from united.