Posting for kleinbl00.
This article built up a crescendo, presenting a case that unifies major players in Trump's attempts to terminate and discredit the Mueller investigation with major players in Trump's "Ukraine" scandal, and then...
- Given Firtash’s past involvement with the Kremlin—given that the Russian state supplied him with his fortune, given that he did its political bidding in the past, given that a Putin insider loaned him the money for his bail—it seems fair to ask: Did he keep the Russians in the loop about his involvement with Parnas and Giuliani? Did he ever seek to enlist their help? These are admittedly speculative questions, but the oligarch’s background demands their consideration.
I'm sorry, which part did you miss? The polonium poisoning in 2006? The novichok nervous system agent used on ex-GRU intelligence asset Sergei Skripal and his daughter, in 2018, in fucking Britain, with no arrests? That part in your own article, when you basically said "Putin gave Firtash $150 million for bail, just a few years ago"? Are you trying to ensure your own safety by pretending that Firtash even has the option of declining to do anything Putin tells him? For posterity: Putin's #1 geopolitical drive is to weaken the U.S., NATO, the EU, and pretty much any other "western" institution. Btw, I've consciously decided to not refer to Putin's actions as those of "Russia", oddly similar to how I would passionately prefer my own country's current policies to be perceived as "Trump's" actions.
Further: SDNY got Parnas and Fruman on Foreign Agents Registration Act noncompliance. One of the reasons FARA laws have any teeth is because Robert Mueller used FARA to take down Manafort. FARA enforcement had been virtually abandoned, and Mueller's use of it set a much stricter precedent than whatever interpretation existed before.
Firtash has been on my radar for a while. How much do you know about Manafort's black ledger? You might not cruise Fox News much (MAYbe), but here's an article that "we" over here on the "left" probably didn't catch, detailing how Devin Nunes accuses a DNC employee of interfering in the 2016 election (on... behalf of Ukraine...?), apparently just because she reported Paul Manafort's connections to Putin? Like, if you were in the Trump campaign, wouldn't you want to know that, and dispense with the guy? Oh, you wouldn't, because you might've already known that, and known that Trump was gonna benefit from Putin's interference in American elections? Last question: How many fucking times do we have to rehash this same theme??
The volume of outright false propaganda beneficial to Russia currently permeating American right-wing politics is one of the most sickening things I've ever seen. I'd claim that we need studies to begin measuring the influence, but if we had them, it wouldn't matter right now, when it counts the most.
OK, last, but maybe not least, on what is once again approaching a daily news roundup (by perceived necessity), the new Russia advisor escorted out of the White House by security personnel earlier today, Andrew Peek. Initially, I thought that it might have been Trump that got wind of something Peek did that greatly upset Trump, who immediately dismissed Peek, but now I think that's probably not what happened at all. After watching a CNN interview with Peek forcefully defending Trump and Trump's Iran policy, he was probably handpicked by Trump, directed by Trump to do something quite illegal, and then career national security personnel were like "Nope! Although POTUS might be immune to prosecution, you're not. :D!". He's young, not completely ugly, white, male, and he's likely already passed several Trump loyalty tests, so of course he's climbing the ranks faster than wildfire under Trump's direction. Well, 'til today. Maybe I'm wrong, but such is my prediction.
It's not that I'm calling Andrew Peek a bad person, merely a convenient vehicle for Trump. A vehicle that just had a bit of an accident.
(quack me back, 'bl00)
Humor an old man. That's what Google gives me when I look up "sky high view." I've been feeling introspective of late. For debate in 10th grade I argued against the reunification of Germany. My argument was that reintegrating the failed state of East Germany with the western powerhouse of Europe would lead to an economic depression and social conditions likely to give rise to Nazism. The Soviet Union had just ceased to be but it was all safe in Yeltsin's hands so I made no considerations of a Romanian underclass, a North African diaspora or any of the other triggers that gave rise to the modern European neoliberal order but in fairness, I also made no considerations for the modern European neoliberal order spending itself to success. I had argued that the best thing we could do in Iraq would be to plant a bunch of McDonald's, give them a couple senators and a dozen representatives so it's not like I didn't grasp globalism, I just had a 10th grader's understanding of it. Not unlike half the Senate. Meanwhile the think-tanks were busy arguing that the last war had been won and we were a couple warp drives and a holodeck away from our neoutopian destiny. Capitalism. The end. We had a Newsweek subscription back then and they had a little blurb about Sotheby's auctioning off the Soviet space program. Few years back I bought the auction catalogues off eBay. It's funny: in 1993 that's the triumph of law and order over the oppressive forces of Marxism-Leninism. In 2016 you can't see it as anything but the Imperialists raping the heritage of a people who didn't really have anything else. We get up-in-arms about Hobby Lobby raiding Iraqi antiquities but I can buy four FLOWN Orlov space suits on eBay right now. Look it up. And the thing is? Any country's clandestine operators are criminal. By definition. And they work with criminals. Yeltsin? He was an oligarch who was working with us. Putin? he was an agent for the oligarchs who weren't and now he's one of 'em. We sat back and watched as a failed socialist state became a failed kleptocracy but failed to notice that Gorbachev destroyed the Soviet Union and Putin rebuilt Russia. Rebuilt it to serve his own interests? Hundo P. But have you looked around? Can you taste it? Hope. Change. We were going to bank ourselves to heaven in 2008. The guy who started the Iraq War to secure a Project for a New American Century was out and the bookish black law professor with the middle name Hussein was in and if you could buy things with idealism we'd be plying flying cars across carbon-free skies. "India has more honors kids than America has kids!" and then they started setting each other on fire because WhatsApp told them to. One of the books I read, can't remember which, had within the preface the notion that the United States didn't win the Cold War, the Soviet Union just lost it first. Neither economic system is perfect. One was demonstrably less perfect but that doesn't mean the other was without flaw and after it had no real rival its proponents doubled down on the stuff they believed in on the assumption that like fairies, trickle-down economics will live if only you clap your hands. The KGB, which ran the Soviet Union, became the FSB which runs Russia. The constellation of appointed and elected roles for the nomenklatura may shift but they're still just stars in the sky. Gorbachev ruined the Soviet Union by believing in communism. He eliminated the waste and graft and gray markets and black markets and nepotism that was actually keeping the lights on and the whole fucking affair was over in six years. Another six years and the whole fucking affair was back. I think the United States was stronger because it's a fundamentally stronger structure. I think the United States was stronger because individual determinism has been the backbone of American culture since before 1776. I think the United States was stronger because we have a tradition of innovation and at least pay lip service to liberty (selectively applied). But I also think that the Democrats believe in the experiment the same way Gorbachev did, and I think the Republicans are pragmatists. Neoliberalism doesn't work for everyone and in the United States, the people it doesn't work for are over-represented. Fundamentally neoliberalism is unsustainable - it is a philosophy of wealth generation and wealth concentration that does not exist in equilibrium. You're only poor if your neighbors are rich and if you're virtuous and poor your neighbors are obviously sinful. For forty years I've been watching Republicans argue on morals and Democrats arguing on principle and for forty years the Democrats have been attracting people who haven't been left behind. Well, they've been attracting people who haven't been left behind but also don't immediately think "what's in it for me?" Yeah I know this doesn't answer your question. Is Putin involved in influencing the President? Obviously. Is this how he did it? Probably one of many ways. Andrew Peek isn't a Russia expert by any stretch of the imagination, he's a Kennedy School kid whose wheelhouse is Iran. I have no fuckin' idea what that's about but at this point Andrew Peek has more foreign policy experience than most of Trump's cabinet which admittedly isn't saying much. Masha Gessen wrote a book about Putin called Man Without a Face. It's about Putin, but it's also about the failure of a nascent Russian democracy to oppose the forces of organized crime, thereby leading to the ascendancy of the criminal underworld. At least when they were contained by the Soviet Union there was some idealism to somewhat steer the ship; once the FSB burned the Reichstag it was all Mafiya, all the time. I think C Wright Mills coined the term "corporatocracy" because he knew no one would allow him to refer to the United States as an oligarchy. Thing is, in an oligarchy? The money only wins if everyone is playing fair. Otherwise to the underhanded go the spoils. We're not there yet. But it sure seems like we're at the point where things either get better or they get ruinous. Someone on Twitter used a phrase like "epochal interregnum" and fuckin' Fourth Turning is 24 years old. Fucks predicted a collapse of global order starting in 2008... in 1996. The boomers want to burn it the fuck down. So in that frame? I mean yeah Putin's money is fucking with American elections duh. Much the way it would have been fucking stupid for the CIA to NOT pay bin Laden clear up to the bombing of the Khobar towers, it would be fucking stupid for the KGB to NOT be cozying up with Trump. I'm not the first person to posit that Melania Trump is a Russian asset; fuckin' hell, man, if you look at a timeline of Trump's life his success is irrevocably tied to dating Iron Curtain supermodels. We can argue about the metallurgy of the titanic. We can run Charpy tests on bits of hull and observe that a blunt force created too much shear for plates that weren't properly tempered. Bottom line, though, is it hit an iceberg. Either enough people care about the way things were or they don't. That is the calculus we make every day, will continue to make every day. It might get bad before it gets good. It might get bad and stay that way for a while. Thing is? It has ALWAYS sucked to be Russian. It's sucked going back to before the Golden Horde. But for the past 200 years it's pretty much ruled to be an American and I think in the long run, it will continue to. It's the short run that worries me, and the size and shape of our doom just doesn't seem important at the moment.
guess I'll revive ['X0Oo_am_Unitoinz'_e-hubski_bAdtimes_dairy_oO0X'] (post 7/?) Dear Diary,
On 01/20/2020, I became convinced that Donald Trump is currently in a joint legal defense agreement with a prominent figure of the Russian mob facing extradition to the United States on bribery charges.
Be honest. It's '75. Watergate is still reverberating and Studio 54 is full of amyl nitrate. There's a stupid, flashy real estate developer in NY who loves Roy Cohn, is dying to impress everyone and wants to be famous. You're Yuri Andropov. How do you not send tall, hot slavic blondes at him until one sticks?
Thanks man, that quack leveled the forest. I've only known a post-Berlin Wall world, so I need this. I was also simply disinterested in history until well after undergrad. You make me wonder whether or not you went to public schools. Sometimes I check in on this blog, run by a U. Mich. PhD chick, Marcy Wheeler: I'm like "noway!", Googled "Firtash Hannity", and lo and behold. So much information to assimilate. I'm behind, and I'm probably better up to speed on all this than a pretty large number of journalists. Of course, that's the strategy, though. Cloak everything in several layers of plausible deniability and quash this thing quickly, before investigators can connect all the dots, repackage it in a palatable narrative, and have it even begin to seep into the public consciousness. Which is what's going to happen anyway, so if the Senate acquits, they'll pay dearly in November. If the elections are fair. Big if.The next day, Parnas and Fruman met with Rudy Giuliani at Trump hotel for lunch. That afternoon, Bill Barr visited SDNY. Hours later, Parnas and Fruman tried to board a plane to go to Vienna to tape an interview between Sean Hannity and Dmitro Firtash. They were arrested on charges that had been processing away in SDNY for months, ostensibly because SDNY feared they would flee, even though they had left the country numerous times while that investigation proceeded. Then, probably after Parnas and Fruman were arrested, Barr visited Rupert Murdoch personally. Hannity never went to Vienna. Nor did Rudy, who was supposed to meet Parnas and Fruman the next day.