‘Russia is running out of manpower’ and Putin may have to shrink his war aims more: national security analyst

https://www.rawstory.com/russia-invasion-of-ukraine-2657330175/

I want to thank Ramblings of an Occupy Liberal for the link to the below story.    Hugs
 
 
'Russia is running out of manpower' and Putin may have to shrink his war aims more: national security analyst
Russian President Vladmir Putin (Shutterstock)
 

During a segment on CNN this Monday, national security analyst Beth Sanner addressed Finland and Sweden’s upcoming applications to be members of NATO — a development that’s “exactly the opposite” of what Russian President Vladimir Putin aimed to achieve with his invasion of Ukraine.

 

According to Sanner, anxiety about how Putin will respond is slightly overblown, and she argued that “basically, Putin can’t do anything” and that Putin has already moved the goal posts by declaring the countries’ potential expansion of NATO doesn’t pose a threat to Russia.

“I don’t think there’s that much [Putin] can do, so he doesn’t want to make a big deal out of it because it will look stupid,” Sanner said.

Sanner also spoke to Russia’s fledgling military campaign, which has seen significant setbacks due to the ferocity of the Ukrainian military’s defense, saying the world is “starting to see some cracks” in Putin’s stability as a leader due to the fact that “people are starting to recognize” that the Russian government is struggling, especially in light of “anecdotal reports” that some Russian troops are starting to refuse orders.

“Russia is running out of manpower and that means that Putin may have to change his war aims even more narrowly.”

Watch the segment below or at this link.

Shapiro Host Claims White Replacement Theory Is “Just A Fact” And Blames Buffalo Mass Shooting On Lockdown

Media Matters has the transcript:

MATT WALSH (HOST): Because although this — I was going to call him a kid but he’s 18 years-old — this man’s ideology is a mess — he’s, again, a lunatic — all over the place, he does mention the so-called great replacement theory.

And this is what they’re trying to hang around the neck of Tucker Carlson, Fox News, really any conservative, myself included.

Because Tucker Carlson and other conservatives have in the past pointed out that the Democrats have been very open about the fact that, you know, they want to minimize what they call whiteness in America.

And they want to bring in voters, you know, from other countries. They don’t want voter ID laws, you know, they want to be able to bring in the voters and have them vote because they know they’re going to be voting Democrat.

So, they want to replace, especially white male voters, with voters who they think are going to be beholden to them.

Now, this isn’t a conspiracy theory. There’s nothing wild or speculative about it. It’s just a fact. And one of the ways you know that it’s a fact is the left and the media — The New York Times, CNN — they’ve been very open about it, many times.

So if it is a theory — if the great replacement theory is a theory, then it’s a theory propagated by the left. They’re the ones who go around talking about this supposed scourge of whiteness. What’re we going to do to minimize whiteness?

And how are we going to fight against whiteness? So they say all of that and then on the right, if we notice that they’ve said that and we point out that, oh, they said these things, then we’re the ones somehow responsible for a conspiracy theory.

Walsh last appeared on JMG when he declared that lesbians will cease to exist over the next 30 years.

Before that, he appeared here when he called for banning adoption by LGBT people. And before that, he appeared here when he called for dissolving the United States.

Walsh also claims that shooting people “is not against the law.” Early this year, Walsh declared that “everybody would be happier” if arranged marriages were mandatory.

https://www.mediamatters.org/media/3988446/embed/embed

https://www.mediamatters.org/media/3988446/embed/embed

 

(((heleninedinburgh))) • 4 hours ago

It’s sort of funny that Shapiro is the one to give these people a platform.
Like… does he think that they’re not antisemites? Or does he just think that they’ll never get into power? Or that they’ll leave him alone because he’s ‘one of the good ones’? Fucking come on you dim little shite.

(((heleninedinburgh))) Bruno • 3 hours ago

The alt-right/great replacement slogan is literally ‘Jews will not replace us,’ how can that possibly be spun as anything other than antisemitism? Even by republicans!

don (((heleninedinburgh))) • 3 hours ago

Chanted by torch bearing brownshirts in Charlottesville. And flushed right down the memory hole by the MSM

Hank Bruno • 3 hours ago

The only reason the “Pro-Israel” Party exist now, is that they need the State of Israel to exist, along with a certain number of Jews to be there, in order for them to fulfill “The Rapture”!!!
Otherwise, they are the SAME Anti-Semites, that they were before, they realized the “need”!!!

Boreal • 4 hours ago

Sure it was the lockdowns that radicalized him, not the RWNJ sites that he visited on social media and online and would have still used whether covid happened or not.

Friday • 4 hours ago • edited

“It’s the Democrats’ fault when my followers do as I say!” -Christonazis.

Bannon Claims Buffalo Mass Shooter Is “A Gay Guy”

“He’s an Azov, he’s a gay guy, he’s got all these insignias. He comes across – he says he’s a left-wing authoritarian, an eco authoritarian. It’s in the manifesto, which they won’t release. I don’t know, just release it, it’s not gonna warp people’s mind. People can make decisions, parents got to be on top of stuff. Why are the parents that – is this kid going to church? Is he in church?” – Steve Bannon, inventing things that nobody else who have actually read the shooter’s manifesto have reported.

 

 

crewman • 3 hours ago

“Let’s just put a lot of crazy shit out there that the left and media will spend time responding to so they don’t focus as much on the fact that we 100% enabled, encouraged, and applauded the mass murderer terrorist.”

Steverino crewman • an hour ago

Distraction and deflection. With a heapin’ helpin’ of projection.

Yves R. Mektin • 3 hours ago

By the end of the week, on the rightwing media, Payton Gendron will be a Native American vegan lesbian senior member of the Biden administration.

HeyYouKidsGetOffMyLawn Yves R. Mektin • 2 hours ago

and a member of both BLM and Antifa.

Octoberfurst Yves R. Mektin • 2 hours ago

Don’t forget he’s also Antifa! He did it just to make the Right look bad because, as we all know, the Right has no problem with people of color!

Rebecca Gardner • 3 hours ago

What does that have to do with anything.

I am so tired of the daily batshittery, pull whatever out of your ass, “news.”

Smear the Queer…
Find someone whose done a horrendous act and smear them as being gay soas to smear the gay community as harbingers of evil. Ties in well with his anti-woke and his don’t say gay support.

Melissia • 3 hours ago

Anything to distract from the fact that he is a white supremacist who openly stated in his manifesto that he was motivated by white supremacy.

Elmer Fudpucker • 2 hours ago

Fat, drunk and stupid.

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danolgb • 3 hours ago

“It’s in the manifesto, which they won’t release.”

If they won’t release it, how do you know it’s in it. I’ve seen other people on the right claiming he’s a Bernie supporter. They’re desperate to shift the blame.

Misutaa Roboto • 2 hours ago

Hear that, folks? He wasn’t motivated by the stuff you’ve been hearing on my radio show like he said. It was really something about the environment all along, or some kind of fаggot shit like that. Yeah…that’s it.

Now that we’ve settled that, back to how the Jews are using the blacks to overwhelm and replace the poor, embattled white race.

Florida Elections Now In The Hands Of QAnon Nutbag

The Orlando Sentinel reports:

Gov. Ron DeSantis replaced outgoing Secretary of State Laurel Lee on Friday with state Rep. Cord Byrd, who cursed at Black Democratic lawmakers during the session and whose wife has made comments supporting QAnon and the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riots.

DeSantis recently appointed Byrd’s wife, Esther Byrd, a former Marine who works in her husband’s law office, to the state Board of Education. She defended theories of QAnon, a far-right conspiracy cult that says the world is ruled by Satan-worshipping child molesters, after the couple was seen flying a QAnon flag on their boat.

They both quit Twitter for more than a year after she posted comments supporting the Capitol insurrection. “ANTIFA and BLM can burn and loot buildings and violently attack police and citizens. But when Trump supporters peacefully protest, suddenly ‘Law and Order’ is all they can talk about!” she tweeted.

Read the full article.

 

Ragnar_Lothbrok • 6 hours ago

EMERGENCY:
Voting rights act needed asap

Gregory In Seattle Ragnar_Lothbrok • 6 hours ago

Manchin would never, ever allow that.

Serene Pumpkin Dwight Williamson • 6 hours ago

I hope you are able to vote in November, and that your vote gets counted, and that the result (if the Democrat wins) is allowed to stand.

Darreth • 6 hours ago

Since this is perfectly legal and there’s no recourse we are watching the real time dissolution of the republic.

A QAnon based nation with nukes will not allow the rest of the world to survive.

The Sentinel • 6 hours ago

Oh brother….

Esther’s FB profile: https://www.facebook.com/EB…

Unapologetically American. Unapologetically Christian.
I’m a strong, conservative woman with a strong, conservative husband and strong, conservative kids – just trying to do our part to save America from rabid, radical leftists! God Bless America!

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crewman The Sentinel • 6 hours ago

No one is asking her to apologize for being conservative.
No one is asking her to apologize for being Christian.
But we are asking her to quit calling us “rabid” and “radical” just because we aren’t conservative or Christian.

Ann Kah RIck Notch • 6 hours ago

When truth died, so did democracy. Trump followed Hitler’s playbook regarding the media.

William • 6 hours ago

Think of the time and money saved by immediately declaring Trump the winner of the 2024 election in Florida!

boobert • 6 hours ago • edited

That’s how you win elections.

Serene Pumpkin boobert • 6 hours ago

No, that’s how you steal elections.

Adam Schmidt boobert • 5 hours ago

More like that’s how you end democracy by having sham elections.

DeSantis Claims State Will Assume Control Of Disney’s Special Government District, Not The Local Counties

The Orlando Sentinel reports:

The state will likely assume control of Disney World’s Reedy Creek Improvement District, rather than local governments absorbing it, Gov. Ron DeSantis said Monday. DeSantis said he is working on a proposal that likely will be considered by the Legislature after the November elections.

Reedy Creek, which encompasses Disney World and neighboring properties, is set to dissolve on June 1, 2023. The governor’s office hasn’t released a written plan detailing how the dissolution of Disney World’s private government will unfold.

At an event in Sanford, DeSantis also insisted Central Florida taxpayers will not be forced to absorb the district’s nearly $1 billion in debt. Under state law, the district’s assets and liabilities would be transferred to the “local general purpose government” when it’s abolished.

Read the full article. In other words, every Floridian will eat that billion dollars, not just the residents of Orange and Osceola counties.

 

 

Jean-Marc Canada – ✓ᵛᵉʳᶦᶠᶦᵉᵈ • 41 minutes ago

Can you spell G-O-V-E-R-N-M-E-N-T-A-L O-V-E-R-R-E-A-C-H

Bruno • an hour ago

Make no mistake, if the law they passed was fine and dandy, this part would’ve been initially included. Fucking idiots.

Rex • 42 minutes ago

Florida residents are going to pay for DeSantis’ asshole moves for decades to come, just like we’re all paying for Trump’s.

Sam_Handwich • 36 minutes ago

I guess Floridians can either smarten up and organize or let this showboating asshole take you down the tubes with him.

Rebecca Gardner • 22 minutes ago

This shitshow is a portent of America’s immediate future.

Eliot • 31 minutes ago

Why anyone would choose to do business in Florida after this is a mystery.

Police Punish the ‘Good Apples’

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/07/what-police-departments-do-whistle-blowers/613687/

Law enforcement needs to protect those who prioritize their sworn duties above loyalty to their peers.

Whistle chained to a handcuff
Getty / The Atlantic
 

About the author: Musa al-Gharbi is a Paul F. Lazarsfeld Fellow in sociology at Columbia University.

Isaac “Ike” Lambert was a decorated detective who had served more than 24 years in the Chicago Police Department. In 2017, an off-duty officer shot a teenager named Ricardo Hayes, who had autism and whose caregivers had reported him missing hours before. Some officers, according to Lambert, then tried to charge Hayes with assault on the basis of a distorted police report. Lambert noticed that his colleague’s official narrative of the encounter was sharply at odds with eyewitness accounts and other evidence (including video of the incident). Lambert declined to press charges against Hayes, then repeatedly refused to sign off on the officers’ fraudulent report—despite higher-ups insisting he help bury the incident. For this, Lambert asserted in a whistleblower lawsuit, he was promptly “dumped” to patrol duty.

In a case like this, an understandable inclination would be to focus on the victim, an unarmed autistic kid who had committed no crime, or on punishing the police officer who assaulted him. (Officer Khalil Muhammad received a mere six-month suspension for shooting Hayes.) Lost in the discussion are principled officers like Lambert, who resisted attempted malfeasance by his colleagues and paid a price for it.

He is far from alone. Police officers in the United States engage in all manner of bad behavior, such as excessive force, sexual misconduct, financial impropriety, and the manipulation of evidence. Holding them to account criminally, civilly, or professionally is extremely difficult, even in cases involving blatant malpractice and misconduct. Yet, even as bad cops evade punishment for wrongdoing, those who stand up to corruption, report negligence or abuse, or decline to comply with bad orders are frequently marginalized, demoted, or outright fired.

In May 2016, Stephen Mader, a police officer in Weirton, West Virginia, responded to a call by a distraught woman who said that her boyfriend, R. J. Williams, was threatening to harm himself with a knife. According to subsequent reporting on the case by ProPublica, she mentioned that Williams had a gun, but that it was unloaded, and she urged the police to intervene to save his life. When he arrived at the scene, Mader, a former marine, quickly surmised that Williams was not a threat and was trying to commit “suicide by cop.” He tried to talk Williams down, and was making progress—that is, until two other officers arrived on the scene and quickly shot Williams in the head. When officers inspected Williams’s gun, they found it was unloaded, as was indicated in the call to dispatch. Rather than sanctioning the other officers for using unnecessary force against someone with a weapon that they had been told was unloaded—for killing the very person they had been called upon to help—Weirton police fired Mader for exercising restraint. By failing to immediately shoot Williams, his superiors argued, he’d jeopardized his own life as well as the lives of his peers and any civilian bystanders. Mader sued for wrongful termination and ultimately settled for $175,000. However, he was not able to get his job back. He worked for a while as a truck driver before joining the National Guard, where he is now a military police officer.

In 2013, police officers in Auburn, Alabama, were assigned by their supervisor to a monthly quota of 100 “contacts”—that is, arrests, traffic tickets, warnings, and so on. Officer Justin Hanners spoke out against the policy, arguing that cops should interfere with people’s daily lives as little as possible, and only when they were needed. He insisted that the role of police should be to serve and protect, not to shake down civilians for money. According to the libertarian magazine ReasonHanners was fired for expressing his opposition to quotas and refusing to comply with them. (Auburn police officials insisted they had imposed no quota, but Hanners produced recordings that appeared to back up his contentions.) Hanners filed a wrongful-termination lawsuit against the city of Auburn; it was dismissed partly on the grounds that, as a municipal employee, his whistleblowing actions were not covered by Alabama’s State Employee Protection Act. In the aftermath, unable to pay the bills, Hanners was forced to spend most of his retirement savings on keeping his family afloat. They ultimately lost their home to foreclosure and had to move in with relatives.

By 2006, Officer Cariol Horne had put in 19 years for the Buffalo Police Department. Shortly before her scheduled retirement, she arrived at a crime scene to find a fellow officer choking a handcuffed Black man while her fellow cops stood idly by. By her account, she urged the offending officer, Gregory Kwiatkowski, to stand down, because the situation was under control and the suspect was not a threat. Her pleas were ignored. Worried that Kwiatkowski, who is white, was about to kill the man, she pulled her colleague’s arm from around the suspect’s neck. In a rage, Kwiatkowski punched Horne in the face, damaging her teeth, she contended. The suspect was taken into custody. Afterward, rather than punishing Kwiatkowski for choking a handcuffed man and then assaulting another officer, Buffalo police fired Horne for obstructing justice, media reports indicate. (No other officer backed up her account, and Kwiatkowski successfully sued her for defamation.) She was denied her pension, and has been unable to retire. Instead, to pay the bills for herself and her three sons, she has been working as a driver—of semis, school buses, rideshares. She has often struggled to pay rent, and even had to live in a shelter for a while.

Suddenly, Buffalo police practices are under new scrutiny—after two officers were filmed pushing an elderly protester to the ground in June—and city lawmakers have requested another review of Horne’s case. Buffalo’s earlier decision to punish Horne, not Kwiatkowski, proved fateful. According to ABC7 Buffalo, he would go on choke another officer on the job, and in a separate incident, punch still another officer while off duty. Yet he remained on the force. In 2009, he was caught slamming four Black teenagers into the ground, then punching them and berating them as “savage dogs.” Once again, his victims were already handcuffed. Kwiatkowski eventually pleaded guilty to using excessive force in this incident. According to The Buffalo News, during his trial Kwiatkowski also admitted to having “lied several times in the past about using excessive force, including under oath in both a civil trial and an Internal Affairs investigation.” He was ultimately sentenced to a mere four months in jail for his crimes—roughly a decade after the 2009 incident. Unlike Cariol Horne, he was allowed to retire from the force and keep his pension.

In the aftermath of George Floyd’s death, many have demanded to know how the other Minneapolis officers captured on camera could have stood around with their hands in their pockets for eight minutes and 46 seconds, while Officer Derek Chauvin knelt on a man’s neck. Cariol Horne’s saga, and others like it, help explain why. The system protects cops like Chauvin, who had at least 17 previous misconduct complaints and had been involved in multiple incidents in which he or another officer used lethal force. However, cops who exercise restraint (in the case of Mader), stop others from engaging in brutality (like Horne), prevent officers from concealing wrongdoing (like Lambert), or blow the whistle on bad police practices (like Hanners)—they are often immediately and severely sanctioned or pushed out, both through formal and informal means. This is perhaps one of the most significant yet largely neglected problems with policing in America: Departments are making an example not of the so-called bad apples, but of the good ones.

Yes, cities and towns need better ways to identify and purge bad cops and should restructure law enforcement to reduce violent encounters. But police departments also need better protections and incentives for those officers who prioritize their sworn duties above loyalty to their peers or their personal well-being. This is underdiscussed, but crucially important. If bad cops are spared any punishment while good cops lose their job, Americans should not be surprised when officers who know of wrongdoing by their colleagues stand aside and let it happen—allowing the bad cops to exert disproportionate influence over how the system functions.

 

India and Pakistan heatwave is ‘testing the limits of human survivability,’ expert says

https://edition.cnn.com/2022/05/02/asia/india-pakistan-heatwave-climate-intl-hnk/index.html

Temperatures in parts of India and Pakistan have reached record levels, putting the lives of millions at risk as the effects of the climate crisis are felt across the subcontinent.

The average maximum temperature for northwest and central India in April was the highest since records began 122 years ago, reaching 35.9 and 37.78 degrees Celsius (96.62 and 100 degrees Fahrenheit) respectively, according to the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD).
 
Last month, New Delhi saw seven consecutive days over 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit), three degrees above the average temperature for the month of April, according to CNN meteorologists. In some states, the heat closed schools, damaged crops and put pressure on energy supplies, as officials warned residents to remain indoors and keep hydrated.
 
The heatwave has also been felt by India’s neighbor Pakistan, where the cities of Jacobabad and Sibi in the country’s southeastern Sindh province recorded highs of 47 degrees Celsius (116.6 Fahrenheit) on Friday, according to data shared with CNN by Pakistan’s Meteorological Department (PMD). According to the PMD, this was the highest temperature recorded in any city in the Northern Hemisphere on that day.
 
People cool themselves in a canal in Lahore, Pakistan, on April 29.
 

Child Whips Front Door Of Black Family

I watch a lot of videos.  But this is one of the most important ones on racism and bigotry I want people to watch.   It is short, but powerful.   This is what really is being taught to young white kids by maga / racist parents.  Notice that when the black guy with damage to his door and car tries to talk to the racist white farther of the child, the white man discharges a gun.  Can you imagine living next door to them?  Notice the open threatening hostility of a child’s birthday cake with a political message that drums into them violence if they don’t get their way even while they are too young to understand it.  The cake was for a ten year old.   This is happening in the US.  This is happening as the Republicans champion racism while decrying that democrats and teacher are grooming / indoctrinating kids because they teach the real racist history of the US and are tolerant of the LGBTQ+ kids who are different from the mainstream.  This the part of the US we need to understand has had a real resurgence since tRump an dnow supported activly by the Republican party.   Hugs

GOP Senator Proves Republicans Have Lost Their Damn Minds!

In his speech against abortion, Montana Senator Steve Daines compares human fetuses to the eggs of sea turtles and eagles. Sandee Lovas breaks it down.

Gay Class President Censored By Florida High School

Class president and first openly LGBTQ student at his school Zander Moricz is taking on his school for censorship. Jayar Jackson and Jessica Burbank break it down on The Watchlist.

“Florida high school senior Zander Moricz was called into his principal’s office last week. As class president his whole high school career — and his school’s first openly LGBTQ student to hold the title — this was a fairly routine request. But once he entered the administrator’s office, he said, he immediately knew “this wasn’t a typical meeting.” ***