What's new

Russia-Ukraine War - News and Developments

Status
Not open for further replies.
The smarter way is for the plutocrats to control their chosen politicians through money and the media to carry out their orders.

No. The idea here is to make the sheeple beleive that they are indeed electing their leaders.

You have to go slow on these people.

In the west people get into Ivy colleges if they have money not because they have done well academically. They do not understand the concept of merit. People with merit or money become oligarchs while people with no merit or money end up in the military as John Kerry said.

1657039989064.png
 
Last edited:
No. The idea here is to make the sheeple beleive that they are indeed electing their leaders.

You have to go slow on these people.

In the west people get into Ivy colleges if they have money not because they have done well acedemically. They do not understand the concept of merit. People with merit or money become oligarchs while people with no merit or money end up in the military as John Kerry said.

View attachment 859308

But Chinese people are not so easy.

For example, Hu Jintao, who was originally just a dam administrator, became the Secretary of the Tibetan Party committee with excellent work achievements.

Then because of his decisiveness and wisdom in dealing with the rebellion, he was selected by Deng Xiaoping and became the successor of Jiang Zemin.

The most interesting thing is that Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin are both CCP Rightists, but Hu Jintao is a CCP leftist, and they still choose Hu Jintao.

I don't know how many countries allow a dam worker without any background to become a national leader. Will such a country be a dictatorship?

03f037cd5ab41215fbe42aaacc5c8157.jpg
IMG_20220706_005757.jpg
 
But Chinese people are not so easy.

For example, Hu Jintao, who was originally just a dam administrator, became the Secretary of the Tibetan Party committee with excellent work achievements.

Then because of his decisiveness and wisdom in dealing with the rebellion, he was selected by Deng Xiaoping and became the successor of Jiang Zemin.

The most interesting thing is that Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin are both CCP Rightists, but Hu Jintao they chose is CCP leftist.

I don't know how many countries allow a dam worker without any background to become a national leader. Will such a country be a dictatorship?

View attachment 859309

And Western democracies do not have an equivalent of Chinese Gaokao exam. You write an unrelated essay on how to make a choclate cake and get accepted into an Ivy college. What a joke of a system.
 
But Chinese people are not so easy.

For example, Hu Jintao, who was originally just a dam administrator, became the Secretary of the Tibetan Party committee with excellent work achievements.

Then because of his decisiveness and wisdom in dealing with the rebellion, he was selected by Deng Xiaoping and became the successor of Jiang Zemin.

The most interesting thing is that Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin are both CCP Rightists, but Hu Jintao is a CCP leftist, and they still choose Hu Jintao.

I don't know how many countries allow a dam worker without any background to become a national leader. Will such a country be a dictatorship?

View attachment 859309View attachment 859310
MH, I respect your position but this is way off topic and its better to stop feeding the trolls. These trolls will pretend to inquisit, in reality only to divert the real issues in Ukraine.

These trolls are talking Democracy and crap to distract us from the real issues of incompetence by Biden admin,uk and EU+ western intelligence. Look at the debacle in Afghanistan withdraw, backfiring of Russian sanctions, runaway inflation/economic depression and potential complete collapse of Ukrainian defense. They are just in denial.
 
@sammuel means that USA has the veto power of the EU, because USA has the right to review the qualifications of democratic countries.
What a load of rubbish.

Come on.

In fact, we all know that the reason why Putin has received high support for a long time is that Russians lack a sense of security, so they pursue a strong president. This insecurity comes from NATO.

In other words, the USA forced the Russians to choose Putin.

Scolding the president is nothing. Unlike what you think, Chinese people can also scold Xi JingPinf.
But dare you scold the president's backstage? Dare you scold the Jewish plutocrats and Israel? I remember 10 years ago, an official of the British Foreign Office was sentenced to seven years in prison for scolding Israel.

And the woman you said was arrested for rumors. If a reporter in your country rumors that you are using living people for secret human experiments, will she be arrested?

As far as I know, the Australian government has also arrested journalists who reported that Australian special forces killed innocent Afghans. This is not a reporter who made up rumors, but he was still arrested by the so-called democratic govt.
The Russians did not ”elect” Putin. He was selected after guaranteeing that Yeltsin would not be prosecuted.
 

The media's Julian Assange problem​

Taking national security seriously


By Jed Babbin -
Monday, July 4, 2022

OPINION:
Under the First Amendment, the U.S. government cannot legally prevent legitimate journalists from publishing our government’s most closely held secrets. But who is a legitimate journalist? Does the media have any responsibility to protect those secrets?
In 2010, Wikileaks’ Julian Assange, himself a skilled computer hacker, allegedly helped a low-ranking U.S. soldier create a false password to gain access to a classified government internet system. The password enabled the soldier to steal about three-quarters of a million documents, many or most of which were classified at the “secret” level or higher. Mr. Assange then published the documents either online through Wikileaks or in The Guardian, a U.K. newspaper.


The stolen and published documents, many or most of which were classified, included assessments of Guantanamo Bay terrorist inmates and activity reports on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and State Department “cables,” some of which contained names of sources of intelligence.
A court-martial convicted the soldier, then known as Pvt. Bradley Manning, of espionage and sentenced him to 35 years in prison. (The transgender Chelsea Manning has since had “her” sentence commuted by President Barack Obama.)
Mr. Assange has spent over a decade avoiding extradition to the United States. He was indicted by a federal grand jury in 2018, and a superseding indictment, charging him with espionage, was filed in 2020. On June 17, U.K. Home Minister Priti Patel approved Mr. Assange’s extradition to the U.S., though her order will be appealed to European courts.
Mr. Assange claims he is a journalist and publisher so, his lawyers argue, the First Amendment bars prosecution for his actions. Prosecutors contend he is neither a journalist nor a publisher. In either event, the First Amendment wouldn’t protect him from the charges of assisting Ms. Manning in illegally hacking into the government document system.
If and when Mr. Assange is finally brought to trial in America, the question of whether he’s a journalist will be resolved but another — and vastly more important question — will not.
That question is whether and to what extent the media has any responsibility to protect our nation’s secrets.
The Supreme Court has held that the First Amendment bars the government from preventing the publication of information under the “no prior restraint” doctrine. In Near v. Minnesota (1931) the court ruled unconstitutional a state law that prohibited the publication of malicious or defamatory materials. In the Pentagon Papers case, New York Times v. the U.S. (1971) the court held that there can be no prior restraint even on the publication of classified information.
In some cases when the media chooses to publish classified information, the damage to national security is obvious. In others, it’s very hard to assess.
In 1998, The Washington Post published a story that said our intelligence community was monitoring Osama bin Laden’s cell phone communications. After the story appeared, bin Laden, to no one’s surprise, quickly stopped using his cell phone. If that story hadn’t been published, it’s possible that we could have prevented the 9/11 attacks.
In 2013, Edward Snowden stole about 1.5 million top-secret documents from the NSA and fled to Moscow. Some have since been published while the rest, like Mr. Snowden, are in Russian hands.
In late 2005, then-President George W. Bush, after The New York Times asked for comment on a soon-to-be-published story, requested a meeting with the publisher of The New York Times and his top editors. He asked them not to publish information on the NSA’s top-secret warrantless wiretapping program used to track terrorists. They refused, and the Times published the story on Jan. 3, 2006.
The media should have an adversarial relationship with the government, but by failing to accept any responsibility for withholding publication of U.S. state secrets in the interest of national security, the media ignore a duty of citizenship.
Some, including the Times and the Washington Post, have guidelines for publishing secrets, but they are strongly biased in favor of publication. That bias is understandable but wrong. Although publications have no legal duty to protect our secrets, they have the obligation to balance the public’s right to know against the probable national security damage that could be caused by the publication of those secrets.
When reporters, editors and publishers decide whether to publish secret information they know that the government cannot exercise prior restraint. They may pretend to consider the possible damage to national security but they have no expertise or experience to guide them to intelligent decisions.
Most of the decision-makers in U.S. media claim to be loyal Americans. If they took that claim seriously, they would — before deciding to publish secret material — consult with people who have that experience and expertise and be guided by them in deciding whether to publish that information.
That’s too much to hope for. Most of the media is too awash in politics and hostile to any exercise of American power abroad to take their obligation regarding national security seriously.
The media evidently believe that the government’s inability to impose prior restraint gives them license to publish anything leakers give them regardless of the consequences to national security. They’re too arrogant to understand that with freedom comes responsibility.
• Jed Babbin is a national security and foreign affairs columnist for The Washington Times and contributing editor for The American Spectator.

Copyright © 2022 The Washington Times, LLC.

Spot the differences :


Anti war ( Vietnam ) demonstration USA :

5492.jpg



Anti war ( Ukraine ) demonstration Russia



~
 
And Western democracies do not have an equivalent of Chinese Gaokao exam. You write an unrelated essay on how to make a choclate cake and get accepted into an Ivy college. What a joke of a system.

They do. It's called SAT. I suppose you have never tried your hands on it.
 
Americans are making fun of Russian progress really ?

it took US over 9 months to take Fallujah with depleted uranium and 1 million dead Iraqis against poor unarmed Iraqis who had no one supporting them

Russia just took area size of France in 133 days against 30 x NATO nations + US and rest of so called "civilised countries" without full mobilisation

Russian steamroller is slowly and steadily advancing and crushing everything in its path

learn from history, no one has succeeded to defeat Russian in open terrain not even the Imperial Japanese in Mongolia who wiped out the British Empire in South East Asia

Russia has a huge heart and is trained to take punishment

there is not such thing as low moral or being exhausted

Russia will stop when it wants to stop
 
Last edited:
What is the exact definition of "democratic election"?

Is a process in which people are free to vote and choose a person or group of people to hold an official position, in order to serve the interests of the people.

Wall street takes out two rotten apples and gives you the freedom to choose one from two. Is this a democratic election?
No, it's not, it's a sham democratic election, but it's still an election. Pretentious, because while there is the freedom to participate and ripe apples, they cannot succeed in the election due to obstacles.
Just like an election is held in Communist China, but it is not democratic, because there the people do not vote, but only the members of a party.

What is your definition of people?
People are the members of a particular nation, ethnic group or ommunity,
 
Is a process in which people are free to vote and choose a person or group of people to hold an official position, in order to serve the interests of the people.


No, it's not, it's a sham democratic election, but it's still an election. Pretentious, because while there is the freedom to participate and ripe apples, they cannot succeed in the election due to obstacles.
Just like an election is held in Communist China, but it is not democratic, because there the people do not vote, but only the members of a party.


People are the members of a particular nation, ethnic group or ommunity,

Palestinians voted to have Hamas as their leaders it was democratically elected and yet US and its allies refused to acknowledge it

even going as far as saying its a terrorist organisation

US gives weapons to Israel to bomb poor Palestinians and they have bought the Arab leaders so they dont speak out

When Russia invaded Ukraine the Americans said it is not allowed to take someones land by force, really?

Israel has put illegal settlements in Palestine by force are you blind ?

Russia is exposing Western hypocrisy

every single European nation no matter how small like Portugal enslaved, steal and invade poor African nations in the past

Russian are the only "whites" who did not do any such thing they never enslaved and robbed people of there identity

this tradition belongs to US and its cronies who's history is built over the dead bodies of the poor and innocents

Now Russia is marching West and everyone is spooked
 
Palestinians voted to have Hamas as their leaders it was democratically elected and yet US and its allies refused to acknowledge it

even going as far as saying its a terrorist organisation
Look, the fact that someone elects someone, even if the electoral process was reliable, also means the value of their vote. So when you elect as a government, a proven terrorist organization for 50% of the countries on earth, then you must know that you will have consequences.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom