This paragraph is kind of buried at the end, but let me say one or two things about it:
“While Mr. Trump’s insistence on granting Mr. Putin that status was misguided, it paled beside his betrayal of the FBI and his own senior intelligence officials. Incredibly, Mr. Trump appeared to endorse a cynical suggestion by Mr. Putin that Mr. Mueller’s investigators be granted interviews with a dozen Russian intelligence officers indicted in the DNC hack in exchange for Russian access to associates of William Browder, a financier whose exposure of high-level corruption and human rights crimes in Moscow led to the adoption by Congress of the Magnitsky Act, which imposed sanctions on those responsible. Mr. Putin’s citation of bogus Russian charges against Mr. Browder was matched by Mr. Trump’s garbled reference to “the Pakistani gentleman” who was falsely alleged by right-wing conspiracy theorists to be behind the leak of DNC emails.”
All right now.
Putin is as obsessed with the Magnitsky Act as Buttercup is with his electoral college victory. You remember that meeting between Russian operatives and Don Jr. et al. at Trump Tower that was so shocking to everyone back in the day? Don Jr. made some noise about it having reference to “adoptions,” but it was really about the Magnitsky Act.
There’s two people I think Putin pays: Rohrabacher and Trump.” That would be Dana Rohrabacher, a Republican representative from California, and our own Buttercup. Here’s a nice long piece on Rohrabacher from The Atlantic, which basically does everything *but* just come out and say that Rohrabacher is a Russian asset. Anyway, Rohrabacher’s most embarrassing manuevers have also been around the Magnitsky Act. He was responsible for getting a Russian-made anti-Magnistky Act propaganda film screened at the Newseum in Rosslyn–he wanted to show it to Congress, but his colleagues wouldn’t let him–and has been lobbying for years to either eliminate or gut the Magnitsky Act.
Why does Putin care about the Magnitsky Act? Because it costs him money. The Magnitsky Act enables the US government to freeze the US assets of Russian oligarchs who are responsible for major human rights violations. Since many of these oligarchs launder a lot of their money in the US, this is a serious inconvenience not just for Putin but for many of the oligarchs who might one day band together to take Putin out if they got pissed off enough and thought he was vulnerable enough.
“[William] Browder is one of a few sources I’ve seen recently trying to make the argument that none of this is really about destabilizing democracy around the globe or sowing chaos in the US; that we are giving Putin too much credit for caring about things other than himself, his money, and his continued political survival. If that’s true, it would explain why, despite having installed his puppet, he’s still responding in draconian style to the passage of this new Congressional act that makes it more difficult for said puppet to do what Putin obviously wants him to do–which is to return all the assets that were frozen when Obama imposed the sanctions. It is also worth noting that a lot of Russian money has already been laundered through Buttercup’s properties, and so in a lot of ways, Putin already owned him even before 2016.”
Why am I going over all this? Because I’m flabbergasted that Putin is now trying to leverage Buttercup into letting Putin start harassing the people who were responsible for the passage of the Magnitsky Act. It shows you that Putin, whatever else you may say about him, is capable of remaining on task even when interacting with Buttercup; it’s kind of mindboggling to reflect that just as Buttercup may have run for President purely to get back at Barack Obama, Putin may have helped Buttercup become president purely to get rid of the Magnitsky act; and that Buttercup is at this moment and probably for the rest of his presidency a tool of Vladimir Putin. Or, as the good people of the Washington Post editorial staff put it:
“In Helsinki, Mr. Trump again insisted “there was no collusion” with Russia. Yet in refusing to acknowledge the plain facts about Russia’s behavior, while trashing his own country’s justice system, Mr. Trump in fact was openly colluding with the criminal leader of a hostile power.”
Every single fucking Reagan Republican should be in the streets demanding impeachment right now. All that “soft on Communism” bullshit for all the 1980s when YOUR PARTY would turn out to be the one that delivered up the US government to a Russian dictator.
gifted student™ brains are about as functional as horses when you get right down to it
which sounds like a shit post but consider: horses? hypothetically MADE for running. look at this magnificent muscle beasts. look at those legs. they must be so good at running, right? wrong. horses are fragile as fuck. horses break their gotdamn legs so so easily, and if they break their legs you just have to fucking shoot them. if they run, the thing they are MADE FOR, too fast their lungs will start bleeding. I just googled horses to see if I was missing anything and apparently if they lie down for a day their organs start collapsing or something so they can’t rest from their One Horse Purpose even when they’re hurt. they’re made to do one thing but they can only do it under Very Specific Conditions and if a single thing changes they just die.
which, you know. gifted students™ get applauded for being naturally smart when we’re five or whatever and then develop a terrible inflated sense of self that makes us highly averse to anything we’re not naturally good at, because it challenges our fragile childbrain egos and if we wait too long we’ll develop mental fences around entire subjects and skillsets (mine are math and studying) because we think we’re Bad at them, when in reality we just need to practice but are frustrated by that because it’s harder than being ~naturally talented~ was. we get applauded for doing One Thing but the second we run into slightly different things that our brains don’t comprehend as readily? it’s a Bad Time. I still have so much anxiety over things I don’t feel Naturally Talented at that I’ve been sitting here writing this post for like 10 minutes rather than read the feedback on my religion paper. I got a 100% on it, but I’m still That Scared of anything other than straight heaps of praise because that’s what my childbrain was acclimated to. just send me to the glue factory already.
I agree with this 100% except… it’s not about being “acclimated to straight heaps of praise”.
It’s about how when you’re a gifted child, being smart so easily becomes the ONLY thing you ever get praised for.
It’s not that we have an inflated sense of self. Quite the opposite. It’s that we’ve internalized the idea that being gifted is the only valuable thing about us, and so doing something we don’t KNOW we can succeed at is terrifying because failure will mean we have no worth.
Reminder that this is coming from the former CIA Director. The former CIA Director thinks the current sitting president has committed treason. Not some blogger. Not an analyst. Not an anchor. The former CIA Director.
Yet another screencap redraw. This time it’s of Gimli and Legolas, yes my colouring style had shifted yet again. Though this really is just me trying to find a good colouring style.
Pay no heed to Gimli’s hair, it will just keep on becoming more…lively as I continue to draw.
I love the eyes a lot and I love how Legolas turned out.
A resolution to encourage breast-feeding
was expected to be approved quickly and easily by the hundreds of
government delegates who gathered this spring in Geneva for the United
Nations-affiliated World Health Assembly.
Based
on decades of research, the resolution says that mother’s milk is
healthiest for children and countries should strive to limit the
inaccurate or misleading marketing of breast milk substitutes.
Then the United States delegation, embracing the interests of infant formula manufacturers, upended the deliberations.
American officials sought to water down the resolution by removing
language that called on governments to “protect, promote and support
breast-feeding” and another passage that called on policymakers to
restrict the promotion of food products that many experts say can have
deleterious effects on young children.
When that failed, they turned to
threats, according to diplomats and government officials who took part
in the discussions. Ecuador, which had planned to introduce the measure,
was the first to find itself in the cross hairs.
The
Americans were blunt: If Ecuador refused to drop the resolution,
Washington would unleash punishing trade measures and withdraw crucial
military aid. The Ecuadorean government quickly acquiesced.
…
In the end, the Americans’ efforts were mostly unsuccessful. It was the
Russians who ultimately stepped in to introduce the measure — and the
Americans did not threaten them.
Catherine wants to make people more aware about how important it is to be aware of these issues.
She knew him for 20 years. He worked as a police officer. 90 days as a punishment is such a pathetic sentence. Total rubbish. this guy is evil and who knows how many victims of his assaults have stayed unknown. What a scums serve in the law enforcement…