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Commentary, sarcasm and snide remarks from a Florida resident of over thirty years. Being a glutton for punishment is a requirement for residency here. Who am I? I've been called a moonbat by Michelle Malkin, a Right Wing Nut by Daily Kos, and middle of the road by Florida blog State of Sunshine. Tell me what you think.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Poof

Anyone know David Copperfield's whereabouts right now? From Reuters-

A church has vanished from the Russian village where it stood for almost 200 years, the local diocese said Tuesday.

The Church of Christ's Resurrection, in the central Russian village of Komarovo, was built in 1809 but in early October someone took it away brick by brick, Father Vitaly a spokesman for the local Russian Orthodox Church, told Reuters.

"We have sent a letter to local prosecutors," he said. "Who exactly did this, the investigation will show."

The church was in an isolated area only occasionally visited by clergymen, so the disappearance was not immediately noticed.

Komarovo is in the Ivanovo region, about 300 km (186.4 miles) north-east of Moscow. The church was not in use but clergy had been considering resuming services there, the Ivanovo-Voznesenskaya and Kineshemskaya diocese said in a statement on its Internet site.

A survey of the large, two-storey church a few months ago found that it was structurally sound, but now all that remains are the foundations and sections of walls, the statement said.

Thieves routinely make off with church property in rural Russia, where unemployment, petty crime and alcoholism are widespread.
Your average drunken unemployed thief won't be able to dismantle a church. Anyone think this story is fake?

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Monday, December 10, 2007

Hand picked

Russian President(and former Knucklehead winner) Vladimir Putin has finally named his possible successor.

MOSCOW - President Vladimir Putin expressed support Monday for first Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev as his successor, saying that electing him president would keep Russia on the same course of the past eight years.

There have been months of intense speculation on whom Putin would support to run in the March 2 presidential elections — along with the wider question of what Putin himself will do once he steps down.

Putin's popularity and steely control has led most observers to expect that whomever he supports would be certain to win the elections.

Putin had long been seen as trying to choose between Medvedev, a business-friendly lawyer and board chairman of state natural gas giant Gazprom, and Sergei Ivanov, another first deputy premier who built up a stern and hawkish reputation while defense minister.

Although Putin is banned by the constitution from seeking a third consecutive term in office, he has indicated a strong desire to remain a significant power figure. He has raised the prospect of becoming prime minister, and his supporters have called for him to become a "national leader" with unspecified authority.

Putin made the statement in a meeting with representatives of the United Russia party — which is his power base and dominates parliament — and of three other parties. The parties told Putin they all supported Medvedev.
I wouldn't expect much change once Putin is out of office, but one never knows. In many ways Putin was an improvement over Yeltsin's failed policies. The country is better economic shape today, its the bullying and authoritarianism of Putin and his policies that rub many people inside Russia and outside that causes criticism and sometimes fear.

Will Medvedev continue Putin's policies? Will Putin still be pulling the strings behind the scenes? I don't think Putin would have picked Medvedev if he didn't both believe his current policies would continue and that he could have some control or influence over his hand picked successor. The risk Putin is running is the position of Russian President is so powerful, they can ignore most anyone they wish. Including the person who picked them for the job in the first place.

Linked to- Bullwinkle, Populist, Right Voices, Right Wing Nation,

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Monday, November 26, 2007

Marching Orders

From the New York Times-

MOSCOW, Nov. 24 — Garry Kasparov, the former chess champion and opposition leader, was arrested Saturday and sentenced to five days in jail after trying to lead a march to the offices of the federal election authorities.

Mr. Kasparov was taken into custody during a scuffle between protesters and security officers on the route to the offices, where he had intended to present a letter asserting that the parliamentary election on Dec. 2 was biased toward President Vladimir V. Putin’s party.

*****

On Saturday night, a Moscow judge ordered him to serve five days in jail for holding an unauthorized march. City officials had given his loose opposition coalition, Other Russia, permission to conduct a rally on Saturday, but not a march.

In a statement, Mr. Kasparov said the court proceedings had been “a choreographed farce from beginning to end.” He added, “It was a symbol of what has happened to justice and the rule of law under Putin.”
This retaliation against Kasparov is hardly surprising. Putin has taken measures after much smaller perceived threats to his power than the former chess champion.

Kasparov's jail sentence isn't the complete picture either.

MOSCOW (AFP) — Russian police late Friday raided an office of The Other Russia coalition led by former chess champion Garry Kasparov, hours before he was to lead a march in Moscow against President Vladimir Putin.

The coalition's spokeswoman Lyudmila Mamina told AFP that the police did not proffer any explanations for the raid in the office housing the party's website.

"They had no documents, acted on the authority of some secret decree, so they could not say what it was about," she said.

"They wrote down passport data of all our staff, drew a map of the office, and wrote down that they found nothing criminal, no drugs, no weapons."
A very sad state of affairs in Russia. The leaders of the country, The Tsar , Communists, Putin, have changed but real political freedom still barely has a pulse in the country. Other than another people's revolution, can anything be done to change the situation? I'm skeptical, sanctions have at best an erratic history of success. Secondly, most countries in the free world fear Russia because they still possess nuclear weapons. Who wants to say Russia is bluffing on their potential use, when the consequences for being wrong are so dire?

Hat tip- Dr. Taylor at Poliblog
Linked to- Bullwinkle, Leaning Straight Up, Third World County,

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Saturday, November 03, 2007

All Knucklehead Day Award Six

Our sixth winner is Nikolay Davydenko. He gets the award for the following.

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia - Nikolay Davydenko, already at the center of a betting investigation, was fined $2,000 for lack of effort a loss at the St. Petersburg Open.

The ATP said Friday the fourth-ranked Russian was fined for lack of "best effort" in his 1-6, 7-5, 6-1 loss Thursday to Marian Cilic.

The top-seeded Davydenko won the first set in 27 minutes, but drew a rebuke from chair umpire Jean-Philippe Dercq in the third set. Davydenko double-faulted four times in the second set and six times in the third.

"When I made a double-fault, he gave me a notice for a wrong behavior on the court as if I was throwing the match," Davydenko said Thursday after the match. "I was surprised. I've never heard anything like this before. No matter how I'd played, no matter what had happen to me, I was never given such a notice."

Davydenko said during the exchange, Dercq asked him about his condition. Davydenko first said there was nothing wrong, but later said the problem was in his legs.

"He could not solve my problem anyway, that why I first told him I was OK, but I didn't play the way I did in the first set. That's why he gave me a notice," Davydenko said. "Later I told him that my legs have collapsed. I could not move."

The ATP is investigating a match involving Davydenko in August in which online gambling site Betfair voided bets because of irregular betting patterns.

In that match in Poland, Davydenko won the first set 6-1, then withdrew against 87th-ranked Martin Vassallo Arguello in the third set because of a foot injury.
Here is my post on the Poland match. I hope for both tennis and Davydenko's sake that there isn't something unscrupulous happening in these matches. However there was a Davydenko match this week with odd happenings also. The ATP took it upon itself to fine Davydenko for the match in Russia, and that's good enough for me. Nikolay Davydenko is our sixth Knucklehead of the Day.

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Monday, October 15, 2007

Trade War

From AP-

MOSCOW (AP) -- Poland warned Monday it would block Russia's entrance to the World Trade Organization if Moscow did not cancel an embargo on exports of Polish meat and produce.

Russia imposed the ban in late 2005 after uncovering what it said were violations of food safety regulations. Polish officials maintain that the country's food quality standards meet EU norms and that the embargo is discriminatory.

"If Russia's position toward Poland doesn't change, we will have to vote against Russia's membership in WTO," Deputy Agriculture Minister Jan Krzysztof Ardanowski told a news conference in Moscow, according to Russian news agencies.

Poland also warned it would continue to block a strategic EU-Russia agreement if the embargo was not lifted.
Russia hasn't at all been shy about bullying its neighbors in recent memory. So Poland wanting to fight back in any way it can is pretty understandable.

Relations between Poland and Russia have been frosty in recent years.
Someone at AP apparently doesn't know Polish history too well. Russia-Poland relations have been frosty for years. The Soviet imposed communism on the heavily Catholic country only been one source of hard feelings. You must also remember that Russia took part in several partitions of Poland in the 18th century. There was no Polish state for almost 125 years after the last partition in 1795.

I think the Poles have understandable reasons not to trust Russia.

Linked to- Right Wing Nation, Right Voices, Rosemary, Third World County,

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Wednesday, September 12, 2007

New Russian PM

From AP-

MOSCOW - President Vladimir Putin dismissed his long-serving prime minister Wednesday and nominated little-known Cabinet official Victor Zubkov to replace him in a surprise move that could put Zubkov in the running to replace Putin next year.

The nomination of Zubkov, who currently oversees the government's fight against money-laundering, appeared to have caught much of the Russian political elite off-guard.

Putin had been expected to announce in December whom he would back to run for president next year — and Russia's two first deputy prime ministers — former Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov and gas giant Gazprom board chairman Dmitry Medvedev — were widely considered to be the leading contenders.

After dismissing Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov — triggering the government's automatic dissolution — Putin explained the shakeup was required to "prepare the country" for forthcoming elections. Legislative elections are to be held Dec. 2, and presidential elections are expected three months later.

State Duma speaker Boris Gryzlov backed the 65-year-old Zubkov's nomination, saying his "life path and professional activities in various fields undoubtedly allow him to lead the Cabinet of the Russian Federation."

He said the lower house of parliament, the State Duma, could vote on the nomination as early as Friday.
Putin like a zebra, never changes his stripes. His choice of Zubkov was cloaked in secrecy, and makes you wonder why he was selected. We can only hope Zubkov is not as authoritarian(and paranoid) if and when he becomes Russian President.

Linked to- Adam, Outside the Beltway, Pursuing Holiness, Webloggin,

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Monday, September 10, 2007

Missile Shield

From Reuters-


MOSCOW- Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday he still hoped to reach a compromise with the United States over its plans to deploy a missile shield in Eastern Europe.

"We have not lost all chances yet, there is still a certain degree of healthy optimism," Russian news agencies quoted Putin as telling journalists during a visit to the United Arab Emirates.

"As for contradictions, they exist and will exist. It is important not to resort to saber-rattling and not to bring the case to confrontation. The main thing is to seek a compromise and reach agreement."

Moscow is unnerved by Washington's plan to deploy interceptor missiles in Poland and a radar station in the Czech Republic, seeing it as a threat to Russia's security.

The United States says it needs to defend itself from missiles possibly launched by "rogue states" such as Iran and North Korea.

Putin has invited the U.S. military to use jointly a radar station that Russia rents from Azerbaijan. Washington has not given its final reply yet. U.S. military experts are expected to visit the Qabala station later this month.
It is interesting that Russia would allow the US to use a radar station in Azerbaijan but not in the Czech Republic. My guess is it because Moscow has more influence in Baku than in Prague. Russia, going back to the days of the czars, has long been wary or paranoid about foreign involvement in neighboring countries.

I could say Putin's fears about a US missile shield are unnecessary considering this news. Russia is having problems at present getting things up.....in the air. LOL.

Also why is Putin concerned about a missile shield when people say it will never work. Someone obviously has their facts wrong. It wouldn't be pacifists in the MSM and science community, would it?

Linked to- Big Dog, Cao, Commonsense America, Pirate's Cove, Third World County,

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Friday, August 31, 2007

From the Silly News Desk

Some news from Russia. Maybe Putin can hire this guy to do heavy lifting at the Kremlin.

Linked to- Blue Star, Morewhat, Pirate's Cove, Samantha Burns,

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian police have detained a 45-year-old municipal worker for stealing a bridge.

The 5-metre span metal bridge disappeared from a river crossing in the Ryazan region, east of Moscow. Police said they tracked it down to the man, who had used his work truck to remove it and then chopped it up and sold it for scrap.

In a statement, Ryazan region police called it "the bulkiest theft of the year".

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Hot love

Some news from Russia. Either the wife mistook it for a candle or she is an Elvis Presley fan.

Linked to- Perri Nelson, Pirate's Cove, Right Voices,

MOSCOW (Reuters) - A woman set fire to her ex-husband's penis as he sat naked watching television and drinking vodka, Moscow police said on Wednesday.

Asked if the man would make a full recovery, a police spokeswoman said it was "difficult to predict".

The attack climaxed three years of acrimonious enforced co-habitation. The couple divorced three years ago but continued to share a small flat, something common in Russia where property costs are very high.

"It was monstrously painful," the wounded ex-husband told Tvoi Den newspaper. "I was burning like a torch. I don't know what I did to deserve this."

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Monday, August 13, 2007

Cycling

Some news from Russia.

MOSCOW (Reuters) - A man cycling from Taiwan to Moscow made it as far as Western Siberia only to be knocked off his bicycle by a drunk driver, Russian media reported Monday.

The 37-year-old Taiwan resident, who was not named, was nearly two-thirds of the way through his roughly 7,000 km (4,350 mile) trip when he was hit by a car in the Novosibirsk region, Interfax news agency reported.

"The victim is currently in a satisfactory condition ... The drunk driver fled from the scene of the accident," the agency quoted a police statement as saying.
Travelling 7,000 km by bicycle without mishap was probably hoping for too much. Here in Florida a bicyclist who'd attempt such a trip probably wouldn't get out of the state without being hit or run off the. Heck they may not even get out of Palm Beach County!

Linked to- Big Dog, Dumb Ox, High Desert Wanderer, Pirate's Cove,

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Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Not the good neighbor

Russia is again bullying a country on its border. This time it's Georgia.

TBILISI, Georgia - Georgia accused Russia of "undisguised aggression" Tuesday, saying two Russian fighter jets intruded on its airspace and fired a missile that landed near a house. Russia denied the allegation — the latest dispute between Moscow and the former Soviet republic.

The Interior Ministry said two Russian Su-24 bombers illegally entered Georgia's airspace Monday night over the Gori region, about 35 miles northwest of the capital, and fired a missile that landed 25 yards from a house on the edge of the village of Shavshvebi.

The missile did not explode, Interior Ministry spokesman Shota Utiashvili said.

"If it had exploded, it would have been a catastrophe," he told The Associated Press. He said experts were discussing what to do with the missile, which weighs about a ton.

The Foreign Ministry summoned the Russian ambassador to give him Tbilisi's formal protest, calling the intrusion and firing of the missile "undisguised aggression and a gross violation of sovereignty of the country."

Ambassador Vyacheslav Kovalenko, speaking to reporters after receiving the note, denied that a Russian aircraft dropped the weapon.

A spokesman for Russia's air force also denied the accusations. "Russian aircraft haven't conducted any flights over that area and haven't violated Georgia's airspace," spokesman Alexander Drobyshevsky said in Moscow.

Relations between the two neighbors have been strained by Georgia's efforts to shed Russia's influence, court Western alliances and to join NATO.

Georgia has long accused Russia of trying to destabilize the country and of backing separatists in its breakaway provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, which President Mikhail Saakashvili has pledged to bring back into the Georgian fold.
What drives a country as large as Russia, to be so insecure that they fear small neighbors like Lithuania and Georgia? A country of 2.5 million shouldn't be a threat to Russia which has over 140 million residents. Then some say Russia invented paranoia. Look what good its done its leaders. The country may still be Communist if they hadn't felt the need to prop up Eastern Europe as a shield against the west.

What will NATO do in regards to Russia's latest aggression? If I was to make a prediction, little or nothing. Georgia will be deemed insufficiently important to force a showdown with Putin.

Linked to- Bullwinkle, Conservative Thoughts, Yankee Sailor,

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Wednesday, August 01, 2007

It was just roleplaying

Some news from Russia.

MOSCOW (Reuters) - It was supposed to be a showcase of Russian democracy, but in a twist that may not augur well for next year's presidential vote, an election for the leadership of a staunchly pro-Kremlin youth group turned out to be a sham.

A Russian newspaper reported on Wednesday that Vasily Yakemenko, head of the Nashi youth group, got members at a summer camp last week to vote for a new leader as he intended to seek a senior government position instead.

Thousands of supporters chose a young activist called Nikita Borovikov to replace him.

But according to Kommersant, citing a source close to the Kremlin, Yakemenko was forced into a U-turn when the Kremlin failed to back his plan, and called the election a "role-playing game" rather than a real one.

A spokeswoman for Nashi denied there had been any change of plan, saying the vote was intended as a role-playing exercise from the start.

Nashi, which boasts 100,000 members across Russia, casts the enemies of President Vladimir Putin as fascists and harassed the British ambassador for several months last year after he addressed a meeting of opposition groups.
Does that mean there will be more Vladimir Putin like leaders for Russia? Just with or without the KGB training? That doesn't bode well for either Russia's neighbors or its own citizens.

Linked to- Pursuing Holiness, Right Wing Nation, Webloggin,

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Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Tell it to Estonia

From AP-

HEILIGENDAMM, Germany - President Bush on Wednesday discounted Vladimir Putin's threat to retarget missiles on Europe, saying "Russia is not going to attack Europe."

Bush, in an interview with The Associated Press and other reporters, said no U.S. military response was required after Putin warned that Russia would take steps in response to a U.S. missile shield that would be deployed in Poland and the Czech Republic.

"Russia is not an enemy," Bush said, seeking not to inflame a heated exchange of rhetoric between Washington and Moscow. "There needs to be no military response because we're not at war with Russia. Russia is not a threat."
Russia certainly is a threat to some of its neighbors. Did President Bush forget this news?

TALLINN, Estonia: When the Estonian authorities began removing a bronze statue of a World War II-era Soviet soldier from a park in this Baltic seaport last month, they expected violent street protests by Estonians of Russian descent.

They also knew from experience that "if there are fights on the street, there are going to be fights on the Internet," said Hillar Aarelaid, the director of Estonia's Computer Emergency Response Team. After all, for people here the Internet is almost as vital as running water, used routinely to vote, file their taxes, and, with their cellphones, to shop or pay for parking.

What followed was what some here describe as the first war in cyberspace, a three-week battle that forced the Estonian authorities to defend their small country from a data flood they say was set off by orders from Russia or ethnic Russian sources in retaliation for the removal of the statue. There are still minor disruptions.

"This may well turn out to be a watershed in terms of widespread awareness of the vulnerability of modern society," said Linton Wells 2nd, the principal U.S. deputy assistant secretary of defense for networks and information integration at the Pentagon. "It has gotten the attention of a lot of people."

The Estonians note that an Internet address involved in the attacks belonged to an official who works in the administration of Russia's president, Vladimir Putin.

The Russian government has denied any involvement in the attacks, which came close to shutting down the country's digital infrastructure, clogging the Web sites of the president, the prime minister, Parliament and other government agencies, staggering the biggest Estonian bank and overwhelming the sites of several daily newspapers.
If you need a reminder of the Estonia war monument controversy, click here. Coddling that psychopath Putin is not going to get him to change his behavior. He is going to be a threat to any nation that becomes cross with him, that includes the United States unless some nation is prepared to stand up to him.

Linked to- Bullwinkle, Cao, Right Wing Nation,

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Friday, June 01, 2007

Nuclear waste dump

More wonderful news about Russia-

OSLO, Norway - A nuclear waste dump in the Russia Arctic may be in danger of exploding because of corrosion caused by salt water in enormous storage tanks, the Norwegian environmental group Bellona warned Friday.

The three tanks are used to store spent nuclear fuel rods at Andreeva Bay, on the Kola Peninsula of northwestern Russia, just 28 miles from the Norwegian border, the Oslo-based group said in a statement.

"We discover now that we are sitting on a powder keg, with a fuse that is burning, but we don't know how long that fuse is," said Alexander Nikitin, a former Russian navy officer who is now one of Bellona's nuclear experts.

The group cited a report from Rosatom, the Russian nuclear authority, describing the danger. Bellona said the storage tanks were long believed to be dry inside, but that recent studies show corrosive salt water is inside the tanks.

"Ongoing degradation is causing fuel to split into small granules. Calculations show that the creation of a homogenous mixture of these particles with water can cause an uncontrolled chain reaction," said the group's Norwegian translation of the report.

Bellona has long been involved in probes of the nuclear risks in Russia, especially on the Kola Peninsula. Its 1996 report on conditions there were a reference work even for Russian officials.

Experts have said the Kola Peninsula has the world's greatest concentration of nuclear materials, with aging nuclear power plants, rusting hulks of Russian Northern Fleet atomic submarines and waste dumps.
The Russian nuclear fleet's home port was Murmansk, which isn't that far from Norway. I always wondered what happend to the old Soviet subs.

Russia is too interested in rounding up protestors, firing missiles, spreading disinformation, or who knows what else to clean up the messes left by the old regime. I'm afraid to say, the country may not improve much once Putin is out of office.

Linked to- Amboy Times, Bullwinkle, Right Wing Nation,

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Monday, May 07, 2007

Microsoft Piracy

From AP-


MOSCOW - A court Monday found the principal of a village school guilty of using bootleg Microsoft software and ordered him to pay a fine of about $195 in a case that was cast by Russian media as a battle between a humble educator and an international corporation.

The trial of Alexander Ponosov, who was charged with violating intellectual property rights by using classroom computers with pirated versions of the Windows operating system and Microsoft Office software installed, has attracted wide attention.

Russian officials frequently allege that foreign governments, including the U.S., are meddling in Russia's internal affairs, and Russian media reports have portrayed the case as that of a Western corporation bringing its power to bear on one man — in this case, a principal who also teaches history and earns $360 a month.
Mr. Ponosov is a teacher and he only makes $360 a month? Why do I think the Russian economy is in a sad state of affairs at present.

I find the amount of the fine interesting. For the retail price of a Windows Operating System at present is higher than what Mr. Ponosov's fine. Did a Russian court inadvertently tell the world what they think the true value of Microsoft's prodcuts are?

Linked to- Perri Nelson, Pirate's Cove, Third World County,

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Thursday, April 26, 2007

Let the dead rest

From AP-

TALLINN, Estonia - Protesters gathered at a Soviet war grave in downtown Tallinn on Thursday, as authorities prepared to remove the bodies despite Russia's angry objections.

Dozens of police faced the 100 protesters at the Bronze Soldier monument as workers erected a tent over the memorial to shield the excavations from public view. Some protesters shouted "Estonia is a disgrace," and one was detained after trying to jump the police barrier.

Three other protesters were detained earlier Thursday after locking themselves in a car and refusing to obey police orders, police spokeswoman Julia Garanza said. Officers smashed the windows of the car.

Estonia's government intends to relocate the Soviet grave, believed to contain the remains of 14 soldiers, and the Bronze Soldier statue next to it.

The Baltic state's ethnic Russians — roughly one-third of the population — see the memorial as a tribute to Red Army soldiers who died fighting Nazi Germany and have vowed to protect it. Many ethnic Estonians, however, say the memorial is a bitter reminder of five decades of Soviet occupation.

*****

The government has said it wants to identify the remains in the war grave and then relocate the entire monument to a yet-undecided location. On Wednesday, Prime Minister Andrus Ansip said the excavations would last up to two weeks.
Just based on what is reported above, I think the Estonian government is being dumb. Identifying the remains isn't worth descercrating their graves. There are thousands in unmarked graves across Eastern Europe because of World War II. Remember all of them by letting them rest in peace

Linked to- Amboy Times, Big Dog, High Desert Wanderer, Morewhat,

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Monday, April 23, 2007

Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin dead at 76

A brave man during the 1991 coup attempt, Yeltsin was less successful as leader of Russia. Then the country was a mess in the wake of the communism's fall. Could anyone have done better? We'll never know but it is funny. Eight years after leaving office, many would prefer Yeltsin to the Knucklehead who succeeded him. RIP Boris.

Linked to- Basil, Right Wing Nation, Third World County, Yankee Sailor,

MOSCOW - Former President Boris Yeltsin, who engineered the final collapse of the Soviet Union and pushed Russia to embrace democracy and a market economy, died Monday. He was 76.

Kremlin spokesman Alexander Smirnov confirmed Yeltsin's death and Russian news agencies cited Sergei Mironov, head of the presidential administration's medical center, as saying the former president died Monday of heart failure at the Central Clinical Hospital.

Although Yeltsin pushed Russia to embrace democracy and a market economy, many of its citizens will remember him mostly for presiding over the country's steep decline.

Mikhail Gorbachev, the last Soviet president, summed up the complexity of Yeltsin's in a condolence statement minutes after the death was announced. He referred to Yeltsin as one "on whose shoulders are both great deeds for the country and serious errors," according to the news agency Interfax.

Yeltsin was a contradictory figure, rocketing to popularity in the Communist era on pledges to fight corruption — but proving unable, or unwilling, to prevent the looting of state industry as it moved into private hands during his nine years as Russia's first freely elected president.

Yeltsin steadfastly defended freedom of the press, but was a master at manipulating the media. His hand-picked successor, Vladimir Putin, has proven far more popular even as he has tightened Kremlin control over both Russia's industry and its press.

Yeltsin amassed as much power as possible in his office — then gave it all up in a dramatic New Year's address at the end of 1999.

Yeltsin's greatest moments came in bursts. He stood atop a tank to resist an attempted coup in August 1991, and spearheaded the peaceful end of the Soviet state on Dec. 25 of that year. Ill with heart problems, and facing possible defeat by a Communist challenger in his 1996 re-election bid, he marshaled his energy and sprinted through the final weeks of the campaign. The challenge transformed the shaky convalescent into the spry, dancing candidate.

But Yeltsin was an inconsistent reformer who never took much interest in the mundane tasks of day-to-day government and nearly always blamed Russia's myriad problems on subordinates.

Yeltsin damaged his democratic credentials by using force to solve political disputes, though he claimed his actions were necessary to keep the country together.

He sent tanks and troops in October 1993 to flush armed, hard-line supporters out of a hostile Russian parliament after they had sparked violence in the streets of Moscow. And in December 1994, Yeltsin launched a war against separatists in the southern republic of Chechnya.

Tens of thousands of people were killed in the Chechnya conflict, and a defeated and humiliated Russian army withdrew at the end of 1996. The war solved nothing — and Russian troops resumed fighting in the breakaway region in fall 1999.

In the final years of his leadership, Yeltsin was dogged by health problems and often seemed out of touch. He retreated regularly to his country residence outside Moscow and stayed away from the Kremlin for days, even weeks at a time. As the country lurched from crisis to crisis, its leader appeared increasingly absent.

Yet Yeltsin had made a stunning debut as Russian president. He introduced many basics of democracy, guaranteeing the rights to free speech, private property and multiparty elections, and opening the borders to trade and travel. Though full of bluster, he revealed more of his personal life and private doubts than any previous Russian leader had.

"The debilitating bouts of depression, the grave second thoughts, the insomnia and headaches in the middle of the night, the tears and despair ... the hurt from people close to me who did not support me at the last minute, who didn't hold up, who deceived me — I have had to bear all of this," he wrote in his 1994 memoir, "The Struggle for Russia."

Yeltsin pushed through free-market reforms, creating a private sector and allowing foreign investment. In foreign policy, he assured independence for Russia's Soviet-era satellites, oversaw troop and arms reductions, and developed warm relations with Western leaders.

That was the democratic Yeltsin, who in August 1991 rallied tens of thousands of Russians to face down a hard-line Soviet coup attempt. Throughout his nearly decade-long leadership, he remained Russia's strongest bulwark against Communism.

But there was another Yeltsin.

He was hesitant to act against crime and corruption — beginning in his own administration — while they sapped public faith and stunted democracy. His government's wrenching economic reforms impoverished millions of Russians — poor people whose wages and pensions Yeltsin's government often went months without paying.

In the course of the Yeltsin era, per capita income fell about 75 percent, and the nation's population fell by more than 2 million, due largely to the steep decline in public health.

Yeltsin was a master of Kremlin intrigues, and preferred the chess game of politics to the detail work of solving economic and social problems. He played top advisers off against each other, and never let any of them accumulate much power, lest they challenge him.

He fired the entire government four times in 1998 and 1999. The economy sank into a deep recession in summer 1998, but Yeltsin rarely commented on the troubles and never offered a plan to combat them.

He was quick to act if anyone threatened his hold on power, standing fast even when his traditional allies called on him to step down. He easily faced down an impeachment attempt by the Communist-dominated lower chamber of parliament in May 1999.

In foreign affairs, he struggled to preserve a role for his former superpower. He called for a "multipolar world" as a way to counterbalance what Russia perceived as excessive U.S. global clout, and in spring 1999 he sent Russian troops rushing to Kosovo — ahead of NATO peacekeepers — to underline that Moscow would not be elbowed out of European affairs.

He wrangled with the West in disputes over NATO expansion and Russia's relatively warm relations with Iran and Iraq. But as Russia's political and economic might withered, Yeltsin had little to offer other nations.

Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin was born Feb. 1, 1931, into a peasant family in the Ural Mountains' Sverdlovsk region. When he was 3, his father was imprisoned in dictator Josef Stalin's purges. His alleged crime was owning property before the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.

Yeltsin was, by his own account, a garrulous, scrappy boy who loved pranks and was quick to fight. And from the start, he bucked authority.

He was expelled from elementary school for criticizing a teacher at a school assembly. Early in his career as a construction engineer, he was given written reprimands 17 times in one year — "a new record," he would later recall proudly. And his long career as a Communist Party official was rife with battles with higher party officials.

He was educated as an engineer and married a fellow student, Naina Girina. They had two daughters.

At age 30, Yeltsin joined the Communist Party after a brief career in construction in Sverdlovsk city, now Yekaterinburg. He became a full-time party official in construction in 1969, and seven years later was named the region's party boss.

In 1985, Gorbachev, intent on his own reforms, brought Yeltsin to Moscow, where he shook up the city's party hierarchy. The strapping, silver-haired Yeltsin cut a popular figure in the capital, making a point of riding city buses instead of a limousine, standing in long lines in grocery stores and loudly demanding why managers were stashing away food for favored customers instead of selling it to ordinary consumers.

A bitter rivalry soon grew between him and the more cautious Gorbachev. When Yeltsin criticized Gorbachev at a party meeting in November 1987, accusing him of a sluggish approach to reform, Gorbachev fired him.

In the old days, that would have ended Yeltsin's career. But he stormed back to power in 1989, winning a Soviet parliament seat in the first real election in 70 years. The following year, Yeltsin dramatically quit the Communist Party, walking out of its final convention.

His popularity grew. Yeltsin was a natural with crowds, shaking hands and bantering in a booming voice. For many Russians, he had the unpolished charm of a "muzhik" — a tough peasant with common sense and a fondness for vodka.

Even then, Yeltsin's career was punctuated by bouts of bizarre behavior that the public chalked up to alcohol. Red-faced pranks, missed appointments, inarticulate and contradictory public statements continued into his presidency, blamed by aides on jet lag, medication or illness.

Yeltsin won Russia's first popular presidential election in a landslide in June 1991. Russia still was part of the Soviet Union, but the central government had started ceding power to the 15 republics.

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Sunday, April 15, 2007

Gary Kasparov arrested

From AP-

MOSCOW - Hundreds of demonstrators defied authorities Saturday by trying to stage an anti-government rally banned from a landmark downtown square, setting off sporadic clashes with police across Moscow and bringing a wave of arrests.

A coalition of opposition groups organized the "Dissenters March" to protest the economic and social policies of President Vladimir Putin as well as a series of Kremlin actions that critics say has stripped Russians of many political rights.

Thousands of police officers massed to keep the demonstrators off Pushkin Square, beating some protesters and detaining many others, including Garry Kasparov, the former world chess champion who has emerged as the most prominent leader of the opposition alliance.

Police said 170 people had been detained but a Kasparov aide, Marina Litvinovich, said as many as 600 people were detained — although she said about half were released quickly. Kasparov, whom witnesses said was seized as he tried to lead a small group of demonstrators through lines of police ringing Pushkin Square, was freed late Saturday after he was fined $38 for participating in the rally.

"It is no longer a country ... where the government tries to pretend it is playing by the letter and spirit of the law," Kasparov said outside the court building, appearing unfazed by his detention.

"We now stand somewhere between Belarus and Zimbabwe," two dictatorships that have cracked down on opposition, he said.
Hardly good company, and Kasparov is right in his comparison. Putin was democratically elected but his rule has been dicatorial in the extreme.

I admire Kasparov's courage to stand up like he did, but it is reckless too. Weird things happen to people who oppose Putin openly. Another such demonstration by Kasparov could have serious physical consequences for the former World Chess Champ. On the other hand, would Putin really allow harm to someone as visible as Kasparov?

Hat tip- Poliblog
Linked to- Basil, Cao, Right Wing Nation,

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Saturday, March 31, 2007

Russian smoke screen

From AP-

MOSCOW - Russia's upper house speaker called Friday for constitutional changes that would allow President Vladimir Putin to remain in office beyond 2008 — a proposal that was quickly rejected by the Kremlin.

In a speech after his re-election as speaker of the Federation Council, Sergei Mironov said the presidential term should be extended from four to at least five years and that presidents should be permitted to serve more than two consecutive terms.

The March 2008 presidential vote is seen as a key test for Russia's political system, and any change in the law to permit Putin to stay in the job would be seen by the West as a further erosion of democracy.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissed Mironov's proposal, saying that Putin opposes any changes in the constitution that would extend his term.

"We proceed from the president's position that it is pointless to change the constitution to extend the presidential term or the number of terms," he told The Associated Press. "This stance of the president remains unchanged."
Putin's official position not withstanding, I wouldn't bet against this being some well planned subterfuge. Putin offically denies interest in serving any longer but one of his toadies in parliament ramming through the constitutional changes needed to let Putin stay on however long he wishes. Then Putin graciously accepts the change. Maybe I'm paranoid, or don't understand Russian politics sufficiently. One thing is certain, Putin can't be trusted.

Captain Ed is also commenting.
Linked to- Blue Star, Right Wing Nation, Third World County,

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Saturday, March 03, 2007

Guinea pigs

Some news from Russia-

MOSCOW - Russian prosecutors have opened a criminal investigation into vaccine trials by British pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline PLC that were allegedly conducted on children without parents' permission.

The Prosecutor General's office said in a statement dated Monday and posted on its Web site Friday that investigators began the probe at a hospital in Volgograd, about 550 miles southeast of Moscow, after several children who received the vaccines fell ill and parents raised questions.

More than 100 children between the ages of one and two were given the vaccines during the trails, which have since been halted, the statement said.

Prosecutors said the deputy director of the hospital had been paid $50,000 to participate in the trials and that such tests on minors were illegal in Russia. They also said parents had been told the vaccines were humanitarian aid.

GlaxoSmithKline officials could not be immediately reached for comment, but Michael Crow, the head of GSK's Russian operations, told Dow Jones Newswires that the allegations were unsubstantiated and untrue.

"All of our trials undergo rigorous scrutiny and this study had been fully authorized by all the necessary Russian agencies," he said.
That really isn't an answer. Could a Drug Company be using foreign children as test subjects for its vaccines and other drugs without getting consent?

Yes I think they could. What do you think?

Linked to-Leaning Straight Up, StinNstein, Woman Honor Thyself,

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