Drool, Britannia: The Ongoing Imbecilization of Britain Proceeds Apace

Uncle Volodya says, "The myth of neutrality is an effective blanket for a host of biases.”

Uncle Volodya says, “The myth of neutrality is an effective blanket for a host of biases.”

2016 is already shaping up to be a watershed year in world history in several respects.  It will be – probably – the year that ISIS’ resistance to the Syrian Arab Army collapses, and Bashar al-Assad drives them out and reclaims control of the whole of the country. It will be – probably – the year that something big happens in Ukraine. It’s impossible to say what, exactly, but the present reality is unsustainable, and if Ukraine rolls into spring with nothing much changed about the situation – no visa-free travel to Europe, no resolution on the eastern mess, the economy still passively obedient to the law of gravity – I believe the Poroshenko government will fall. Probably.

It will also be the year that “probably” entered the British official and legal lexicon as an acceptable modifier to judgment. Let’s preview what the updated definition might look like, shall we?

Probably

  1. adverb/UK/ˈprɒb.ə.bli

Used to mean, “very likely”

 I’ll probably be home by midnight                                                                                                  I’m probably going – it depends on the weather                                                                          He probably didn’t even notice

2. judicial modifier/UK/ˈprɒb.ə.bli

Used to mean, ” judged to have occurred as described despite the inability to prove it did through the introduction of compelling and demonstrable evidence; based, rather, on a surpassing need for it to be true. Shall be assumed for reporting purposes to constitute sufficient certainty that extrapolations can be made as if they were facts”

The murder was probably carried out by the Russian state, probably on the personal orders of Vladimir Putin

The British press has long been an embarrassment (as is, in fact, the political establishment itself), and it often seems as if every British newspaper is nothing more than a tabloid, filled with the most salacious gossip interspersed with photos of the idle rich or ‘hot’ celebrities capering and mugging and showing off their naughty bits. The Independent is owned by a former Foreign Intelligence officer of the KGB and billionaire, although nobody in the British press ever refers confrontationally to his spy background – instead making excuses for it and suggesting he was not really very interested in British secrets, ho, ho – or calls him an oligarch unless it is immediately followed by an explanation of why the label ‘tycoon’ or ‘businessman’ fits better.

Let’s look at their latest cacophony of outrage over thoroughly un-British evildoing, featuring the British media’s favourite target – Russia, and its president, Vladimir Putin. No barbarism, savagery or disgusting perversion is beneath him, as we will learn. Try to keep a stiff upper lip.

I refer, of course, to the ignoramus festival surrounding the release of the “Owen Report’, which is being presented as ‘findings’ and in which Sir Robert ‘finds’ that the Russian state ‘probably’ killed Litvinenko, and that his killing was ‘probably’ personally ordered by Vladimir Putin…because, you know, only a state can get hold of that quantity of polonium and if the state did so, it must have been at Putin’s order. Or something. Because he is personally in charge of everything in Russia.

Including, I imagine, the transfer to the United States of America of around 8 grams of polonium 210 per month, made in Russian state reactors, at a cost of around $2 million per gram. A milligram, the same article reports, would have been enough to kill Litvinenko. What the United States receives every month – with the telltale signature of having been made in a Russian reactor, ha, ha – would kill about eight thousand Litvinenkos. The United States is Russia’s sole buyer of polonium 210, and the United States has an official government policy of hatred for Russia and is committed to its downfall. Hear that whooshing noise? It’s your beyond reasonable doubt being sucked out the window. At least two states are known to possess easily enough polonium 210 to have killed Litvinenko, and in both cases it would be traceable to a Russian reactor, according to the silliness broadcast by the press. What, the USA would never kill someone just to blame it on someone else? Don’t make me laugh.

Follow this amazing tale, as the British media goes on an extravagant tour of finding polonium traces all over the City of London.  Alexander Lebedev’s The Independent makes clear that when Mrs. Litvinenko originally sought an inquiry, Her Majesty’s government blocked it, because it needed Russian help on the ‘denuclearization of Iran’. But once Britain got its nose out of joint – or, more correctly, was told by Washington that its nose must be out of joint – over Ukraine, despite there being no proof at all of Russian intervention on a scale that would make any difference at all, why, it was ‘game on’ for an inquiry. Comically, there was massive and widely-trumpeted interference from the west on Ukraine’s side. Just before I leave this piece, I could not help laughing at the headline, which includes, “Moscow Fumes at Kremlin-Killing Verdict”, although it does not mention a single word of a Russian response. We’re just supposed to assume Moscow is fuming, because making it fume was the objective. Psychologists call that “projection”.

For her own part, the widow Litvinenko always adamantly denied her husband was working for MI6…until Berezovsky stopped the monthly cheques. Once that happened, she was okay with admitting that Sasha worked for MI6, which employment is now a matter of public record.

Walter Litvinenko, Sasha’s father, described how he told an impromptu press conference that his son had ‘a small atom bomb’ in his body and that he had given his life for Britain – and inspired a very agitated response from Alexander Goldfarb. Goldfarb, you’ll recall, was Boris Berezovsky’s lieutenant, a former research scientist once employed at the Kurchatov Institute of Atomic Energy in Moscow. Walter Litvinenko had the impression, from this, that he had said something too soon, and indeed he did, because he had been prompted with this information by Goldfarb, which suggests that Goldfarb – probably – knew about the radioactive isotope before Scotland Yard did.  Polonium 210 was discovered in Litvinenko’s urine, in a plastic drain bottle under his bed, after he had died. The same source reports that Litvinenko’s head was shaved by someone in the employ of Ahmed Zakayev, the famous (in the UK) ‘Chechen dissident’ who was allegedly a friend of Litvinenko as well as an associate of Berezovsky. We can therefore not know to what extent Litvinenko’s hair was falling out, because it was all removed. Alexander Goldfarb is also the alleged receiver of the ‘deathbed letter’, in which Litvinenko accuses Putin of murdering him in lurid prose which would do Tom Clancy proud, although Litvinenko could barely speak English and, by that stage of his poisoning, should have been incapable of speech.

Edward ‘Snappin’-Turtle Crazy’ Lucas works himself into such a froth that he could shave without even soaping up, over the Owen Report – which, you heard it here first, is rendered all the more credible because “It does not back every allegation against Russia – just those where the evidence is incontrovertible.” The report, such as it was, did not ever say that any evidence it relied upon was incontrovertible, and in many cases simply extrapolated ‘truths’ from previous unsubstantiated statements made earlier in the report. That’s incontrovertible enough for Lucas, though, whose loathing of Russia and everything in it is legendary. He also tries to get the British off the hook for relying on secret evidence; it may have come from an electronic intercept from the Kremlin, and we don’t want them to know that their conversations are being overheard and recorded. At that point, Saddam Hussein rode through the room on a three-legged zebra, wearing a cheerleaders costume of the Los Angeles Rams, and I’m afraid I was distracted and did not catch the rest of what he said.

Polonium 210 traces were found, we’re told, at the Millenium Hotel where the Pine Bar is located, in the Itsu sushi restaurant where Litvinenko met with ‘Italian academic’ Mario Scaramella, in a cab Litvinenko shared with Akhmed Zakayev, in the lap-dancing bar Hey Jo and on the fax machine at Boris Berzovsky’s offices. The machine, allegedly, was used by Litvinenko, probably to send a message to the library to apologize for being late returning his copy of “The Power of Positive Thinking” because he was busy helping old ladies across the street. Because he was just that kind of guy.

Did he lick the fax machine? Because according to all the testimony presented by Her Majesty’s Government, Litvinenko did not ever touch polonium with his hands. He drank it, in tea, presumably by pouring it into his mouth and swallowing it as the great majority of people do. Now the polonium is inside Litvinenko. Polonium, we are told, can be safely held in the hand because it cannot penetrate skin. Litvinenko, presumably, was covered with several layers of skin. Vice News tries to head off this line of inquiry by adding that Lugovoi also visited Berezovsky’s offices ‘in the days before the poisoning’, but we have only Berezovsky’s word for that. Does anyone need a reminder what kind of witness Berezovsky was? According to the trial judge who found against him in Berezovsky vs. Abramovich, Berezovsky was “an unimpressive, and inherently unreliable, witness, who regarded truth as a transitory, flexible concept, which could be moulded to suit his current purposes.”

Even if we spot the Russia-dunnit side the polonium traces in Berezovsky’s office, and stipulate that Lugovoi was there, how do we explain Scaramella’s contamination? Did Lugovoi and Kovtun come along for some sushi as well? No, they didn’t, and Litvinenko should not have had any polonium residue on him at all. Scaramella, who once claimed to work for the CIA. Where did the polonium in the cab, which was allegedly so toxic it had to be withdrawn from service, come from? Only Litvinenko and Zakayev were in the cab, and all the polonium was supposed to be inside Litvenko, safe from transmission behind Litvinenko’s skin.

Which brings up another question – why are Kovtun and Lugovoi still alive, and in apparent good health? They apparently were covered with polonium from head to foot for a month; after not being able to detect it at all, the British suddenly found it everywhere. Lugovoi, according to upstanding, honest citizen Boris Berezovsky, visited his offices days before the poisoning, and left traces of polonium on his fax machine and office furniture. According to the British Embassy in Moscow, Kovtun and Lugovoi came in unannounced, in a great sweat to prove their innocence, after Litvinenko had died. He lived for three weeks after being poisoned, yet Lugovoi and Kovtun were still so toxic that they left traces of it on the table where their hands rested! The British Embassy, or that section of it, was ‘locked down for months’. What does it take to get rid of polonium? Are we to assume these men did not shower or wash their hands for a month? And, that being the case, how is it possible that neither man touched something with his bare hands which later ended up in his mouth – a hamburger, a dill pickle, the rim of his glass or the lip of a bottle? Radiation on the table where their hands touched, a month after they allegedly poisoned Litvinenko – suggesting there was still transferable residue – severe enough to lock down the Embassy, yet they’re still alive? When it takes only a milligram to kill you? Come on – who would believe that?

Anyway, enough about that – I want to move on to Stage Two of the British smear campaign, in which the press gleefully passes on that Litvinenko accused Vladimir Putin of being a ‘practicing pedophile’; gee, maybe that’s even why Putin had him killed!!

All the accusations that Putin has been a pedophile since, like, forever spring from this moment – when he kissed a small boy’s stomach during some kind of public appearance in which onlookers were lining the road. The official story is that the boy did not appear particularly happy to be there, and that Mr. Putin asked him why he was sad. He, or perhaps his mother, replied that it was because he had a stomach-ache. Mr. Putin, apparently spontaneously, ‘kissed it better’ as mothers commonly do with their children. Nobody in Russia appeared to be greatly upset by it or to see anything sexually untoward in it, and the child’s mother was visibly proud. I suppose the western media will counter that of course she appeared happy about it – she would not dare appear any other way, or Putin would have them all killed.

The western press, however, was in an uproar. Litvinenko quickly injected a story that Putin’s superiors during his time in the KGB knew that he was a pedophile, and there were suspicious gaps in his career history. As well, he said, there were videotapes of Putin, while he was a student, ‘making sex with underage boys’. When Putin became Director of the FSB, his story went, he sought the evidence out and destroyed it.

Just one of the many problems with that story is that videotapes did not exist when Putin was a student. The first video recorder – the Sony Betamax – was rolled out the year Putin graduated; 1975. Another problem is why the KGB would record, even if they had the capability, some student ‘making sex with underage boys’, and then stash the tapes away for later leverage – why would they not immediately arrest him instead? Or had they already been to the future in their time machine, and knew he would someday be the President? Shame they hadn’t stopped at the year he was appointed Director of the FSB (1998), because that might have warned them that when he found those tapes, he might not just settle for quietly destroying them, and might come looking for whoever recorded them on a medium which had not yet been invented.

Was there ever any record of Putin being arrested for sex offenses against children? They’d have nothing to fear from him when he was just a snot-nosed student, would they? All right, did anyone ever come forward after the accusations from the western media, perhaps flee to the west where Putin couldn’t reach them, and confess, “Putin assaulted me”. Nope. So what we have is the word of a probable liar – at least, his brother reported that he had proudly recounted his part in the phony ‘poison pen’ attempt to kill Berezovsky (which was a successful fabrication in that it allowed Berezovsky to stay in England), and we know that ‘probably’ is close enough for government work – who worked for a known liar, so assessed by Madame Justice Gloster in Berezovsky vs. Abramovich.

Home Secretary Theresa May, who personifies today’s western weathervane politician, announced that what Russia had done constituted an “unacceptable breach of international law” – probably, because there wasn’t any evidence which conclusively proved it did anything. But Theresa May steadfastly blocked an inquiry until July 2014, after she had been ordered by High Court judges to reconsider. What happened in July of 2014, do you remember? Yes, the shooting down of MH-17, which was immediately and vociferously blamed – by Britain – on Russia in general and Mr. Putin personally. That investigation is now falling apart, as the evidence simply cannot be made to fit the narrative. Britain’s politicians continue to embarrass the country, and its press slathers on the crazy like the frosting on a great big fruitcake.

But Britain has likely made a lifelong enemy this time, and it seems to sense this; several sources suggest the country, having thrown shit at the walls like a two-year-old, wants to move on without making the situation any worse. The talking chancre known as James Nixey, who has popped up here before, offers several possible reasons for this;

  • They fear that a firm response will cause British commercial assets in Russia to be expropriated. Russia is only a moderately important export market but some UK financial services companies and energy companies are over-extended there.
  • It is in the nature of politicians and diplomats to want a quick fix of better relations through mollification. This quick fix necessarily entails drawing a veil over such inconvenient truths as one country murdering the citizens of another in its capital city.
  • Russia is ‘too big and too important’ to antagonize further.
  • Russia has had considerable success in encouraging Western diplomats to believe that no major international problem can be resolved without it.
  • The UK is too caught up in tactical issues to think broadly about what needs to be done with Russia.
  • The government believes, erroneously of course, that Russia has half a point on many international issues, including debates over spheres of influence, missile defence and NATO enlargement.

Incredibly, he seems to think that if Britain would finally get tough with Russia and beat it like a redheaded stepchild, that would promote better trade ties with Russia and safeguard British assets from being expropriated, as he plainly disagrees with the government’s too-tepid response. I don’t know what kind of secret weapon he must be hiding in his basement, but Britain is not in any shape to be slapping anyone around without one.

I think the relationship – such as it was – between Russia and the Russophobic Empire of Formerly Great Britain is at an end. I hope all that bootlicking to Washington was worth it.

Editor’s Note: As usual, I am indebted to the readers for their advice and their provision of great substantiating links. For this post, special thanks to Nat and Russian Bot for their stellar assistance.

This entry was posted in Corruption, Economy, Europe, Government, Law and Order, Politics, Russia, Strategy, Trade, Vladimir Putin and tagged , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

1,367 Responses to Drool, Britannia: The Ongoing Imbecilization of Britain Proceeds Apace

  1. Patient Observer says:

    Forbes has determined that Fidel Castro and Slobodan Milosevic have/had $100 million stashed away although others have placed Milosevic’s nest egg in the billions of USD.

    http://www.forbes.com/2002/03/04/royalsphotoshow.html

    The $100 million figure is probably the default assumption for small-time Communist dictators.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      “…we calculate the net worth of Castro based on a percentage of Cuba’s GDP.

      No “probable” in front of “percentage”?

      • Patient Observer says:

        Missed that part! It must have been a lengthy chain of logic that they omitted from the article probably because it does not exist.

      • marknesop says:

        Cuba is actually a good example to keep in mind when Washington tries to seize the moral high ground over Russia’s tourist sanctions against Turkey – *Sniff* we certainly don’t tell our people who they are allowed to visit.

  2. Jeremn says:

    Dutch MP publishes IATA findings given yesterday to Dutch parliamentary committee on MH17:

    “With national intelligence services watching and photographing developments on the Russia-Ukraine border and keeping a close eye on hostilities within Ukrainian territory, it is reasonable to think that the availability of sophisticated anti-aircraft weaponry within Ukraine had been well-known, or at least suspected. In fact, shortly after the downing of MH17, media reported that intelligence agencies had this critical information. That raises a fundamental question: why was the civil aviation community left oblivious to the presence of anti-aircraft weaponry and the grave threat to civil aircraft it represented?”

    Good question, isn’t it?

    • marknesop says:

      The Netherlands are finally trying to put on the brakes so as not to be dragged over the edge of a terrible mistake, the outlines of which were always there to see, but which the Dutch chose to ignore in favour of knee-jerk partisanship and NATO name-calling. Nice to see, but too little far too late.

  3. et Al says:

    Financial Crimes: Refitting Royal Navy’s combat ship engine to cost tens of millions
    http://www.ft.com/fastft/2016/01/29/refitting-royal-navys-combat-ship-engine-to-cost-tens-of-millions/

    …A fault in the engine design, however, means that running all of the ships power-hungry systems at once can cause its generators to trip out, leaving the vessels completely without electricity and defenceless,..

    …A senior Royal Navy officer said the problem would be “catastrophic” in a combat situation, and was not a rare occurance aboard the Type 45s. “It happens whenever we try to do too much with them at once,” he said…

    …The ship’s WR21 gas turbines were built by Rolls Royce and the electric propulsion motors by GE. The Type 45 project as a whole was led by BAE Systems….

    …The WR21 design was not the first choice of power and propulsion system for the destroyers. As the cost of building them began to spiral out of control – driven largely by their top-of-the-range air defence systems – Whitehall officials opted for a cheaper alternative to the original proposals…
    #####

    Hilarious. £1b warships with engines not up to the job, all to save some cash. BAE ‘It’s not me guvnor!’. Penny pinching by a declining power and wanting to play with the Big Boys, yet still make stupid choices like this on capital projects. And let us not forget the use of Trident’s nuclear reactor design for the new RN attack subs, rather than the originally proposed more recent compact design, that left them needing a a nice bulge to fit the older, cheaper reactor….

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Still better than the Soviet rust-tubs, though. Why, I remember the other year when a squadron of Reds visited the Caribbean and all the Yahoo brain-dead were guffawing away when the showing-the-flag voyage was announced, saying how those idiot Russians in their worthless vessels would have to be towed back across the Atlantic — that is if they made the westbound crossing in the first place, which they doubted.

    • marknesop says:

      Obviously it is not only Britain who suffers from The Revenge Of The Bean-Counters, and government military contracts are almost always a clash between ambition and budget. The military’s function is not to be a designer itself – rather, it submits a wish-list of what it wants the new destroyer or fighter or helicopter to be capable of doing. Then that is turned over to the civilian designers with the instruction, “Make me something that can do all this, and submit your proposal to build it”. It’s generally a pretty good system, in concept at least, but the breakdown almost always occurs when the bean-counters start cutting things because the new design just isn’t affordable. And naturally every country wants to build in-house so as to benefit from the jobs generated, rather than just buying off-the-shelf. So they say, must it really do Mach 4? How about Mach 2? Would that be enough? And the ambitious crowd never says, the one we already have will do Mach 2; let’s just scrap the plan and keep our old ones, because that would be capitulation and everyone wants to build something new. So the bean-counters say, sure you can have something new. You can spend this much. And the two sides reconcile by cutting capability until the new design is an abortion which should never have been built. But very few nations have unlimited money to the degree they can afford the best in high quantities, and the UK is not one of them.

      I was in HURON when we visited Tokyo in 1988, and our host ship was the destroyer SHIRAYUKI (ISOYUKI shown, but the same class). Sailors from that unit visited us for tours, and were amazed at the SOLAR plants we used for generating electrical power onboard; HURON had three of this type. They said they had the same generator, but used it only as a backup in case of emergency and would never use it as a front-line system. Kind of suggesting how courageous we were, while at the same time pitying us because we didn’t have the money or the political will to do it right.

      They did serve a purpose, though. Athlete’s foot is a common health hazard in the navy because of the communal showers, and everyone is strongly encouraged to wear shower sandals to avoid touching the deck with your bare feet. The Chiefs and Petty Officers shower facility in HURON was directly above Number 3 SOLAR, and nobody ever had to be told to wear shower sandals, because the deck was too hot to stand on in your bare feet. The only respite was when it had eathen its own blades (again) and had to be shut down for repair.

      Another common contracting evil is the purchase of a component which is known to be inferior, but is made in a factory in a particular province, state or region which is in economic distress and needs work. Consequently, production is steered there for political reasons, and the military ends up with a piece of junk which was made with the very best intentions.

  4. et Al says:

    Tass: Japan says third countries’ participation in developing Southern Kurils ‘unacceptable
    http://tass.ru/en/world/852106

    Japan’s Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida has shown discontent over Moscow’s invitation for foreign partners to join fisheries projects in the Southern Kuril Islands if Tokyo turns down the proposal.

    “The participation of third countries in the economic development of the Northern Territories (the way Japan calls the Southern Kurils) is unacceptable and is not in line with Japan’s position,” Kishida told reporters in Tokyo after a government meeting….

    …Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Yuri Trutnev, who is also the presidential envoy to the Far East, told Reuters on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos that Russia wants to develop the Kuril Islands “at a brisk pace.”

    “The conditions are ideal there for fishing and fish farming. So we are inviting Japanese companies, and are ready to give them priority in joint ventures,” Trutnev said. “But if they turn it down – we will find others who are willing to work with us. And I know that it can be of great interest to other foreign investors,” he added.

    Japan refuses to participate in the economic projects on the Kuril Islands and does not recommend its citizens to visit them saying that the necessary completion of the Russian documents confirms Moscow’s sovereignty over the Southern Kurils….
    ####

    The PPNN elsewhere went with “Russia invites Japan to develop fisheries around disputed Kurile Islands”.

    It looks like Russia is turning up the heat on Tokyo who think that Russia is in such a desperate financial situation that they’ll give the Kurile islands away (I think I posted and item a while back quoting some senior Japanese minister uttering such bollocks). I guess this is Russia’s “Up yours!”.

    While looking this up, I also came across these tidbits:

    The Asahi Shimbun: Russia says peace treaty with Japan, islands issue quite separate
    https://ajw.asahi.com/article/behind_news/politics/AJ201601270057

    …“We are not thinking that the peace treaty (with Japan) is synonymous with the solution of the territorial issue,” Lavrov said at a Jan. 26 news conference here…
    ####

    &

    Intrafish: Russian Fishery gets approval to acquire pollock firm
    http://www.intrafish.com/news/article1431236.ece
    ####

    Shurely not pollocks!

    • Lyttenburgh says:

      We can only respond to Japanese in the only laguage they seem to understand:

      “All your bases islands are belong to us! Ha. ha. ha. ha.” (c)

      • Jen says:

        So the Russians should offer permits to the Chinese and Koreans to develop fisheries and watch the Japanese melt down faster than you can say “Fukushima”.

        • marknesop says:

          I believe that is exactly what they are saying – Japan gets first refusal because of their sensibilities and perception of involvement, but if they don’t want it, don’t say you weren’t asked. This is forcing Japan’s hand – is you in, or is you out?

  5. Patient Observer says:

    I remember it like yesterday:
    http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/US_remembers_astronauts_killed_pledges_to_reach_Mars_999.html
    Seven crew members were killed because of crap engineering and officials driven by a combination of hubris and political pressure. I think that we discussed this before – the seven were not killed by vehicle breakup but rather by impact with the ocean. It must have been a terrifying last few minutes as NASA had provided absolutely no means for them to survive such a scenario, probably not even parachutes.

    • et Al says:

      Grissom, White & Chafee:

      Forbes via slashdot.org: The Tragedy Of Apollo 1 And The Lessons That Brought Us To The Moon
      http://www.forbes.com/sites/startswithabang/2016/01/27/the-tragedy-of-apollo-1-and-the-lessons-that-brought-us-to-the-moon/#29024d9a43b4

      …January 27th marked the ”plugs-out” test, where the command/service module was operating with all three astronauts inside under its own power, an essential test for ensuring the spacecraft’s flight worthiness. There was no fuel, no cryogenics, and no known potential hazard to this test. All three astronauts entered the module in fully pressurized space suits, while the cabin was pressurized and filled with oxygen. The three hatches — the removable inner hatch, the hinged outer hatch, and then the outer hatch cover — were then externally installed. A minor communications problem arose in the late afternoon, causing the simulated countdown to stall at T-minus-10 minutes. What happened next was very fast….

      …When the spacecraft — the command/service module — arrived at the Apollo Spacecraft Program Office, both the administration manager (Joseph Shea) and the crew expressed a number of concerns, including about the use of nylon netting and velcro (both highly flammable) inside the cabin. While Shea gave the spacecraft a provisional passing grade and ordered the flammable material removed, it never was….

      …The lessons learned led to each of these issues being more than adequately addressed, and led to a change in the way NASA treated its astronauts and its missions. As famed NASA flight director Gene Kranz, who brought the Apollo 13 crew home, said in the aftermath of Apollo 1,

      From this day forward, Flight Control will be known by two words: Tough and Competent. Tough means we are forever accountable for what we do or what we fail to do. We will never again compromise our responsibilities… Competent means we will never take anything for granted… Mission Control will be perfect.
      When you leave this meeting today you will go to your office and the first thing you will do there is to write Tough and Competent on your blackboards. It will never be erased. Each day when you enter the room, these words will remind you of the price paid by Grissom, White, and Chaffee. These words are the price of admission to the ranks of Mission Control…

  6. PaulR says:

    Danielle Ryan critiques a new report ranking Russia as the 11th most dangerous country in the world – more dangerous than Yemen. http://journalitico.com/2016/01/28/fancy-a-trip-to-russia-better-not-its-the-11th-most-dangerous-country-in-the-world/#more-6032

    • Patient Observer says:

      Danielle Ryan let them off a little easy but the absurdity of the claims speak for themselvest:
      ” Incarceration, nuclear weapons, weapons exports. Fine. But then you look at the “combined major factors” and find Russia scores 2.7 out of 5 on “Domestic and International Conflict” whereas the US scores 1.7 out of 5. That just doesn’t tally, if you’re making any fair assessment of where the US stands in terms of “international conflict”.

      So, the fact that Russia has nuclear weapons and exports weapons makes it a dangerous place to visit (unlike the US for example). Or, the rate of incarceration in Russia makes it inherently dangerous but a higher rate in the US does not. He is probably an idiot in the pay of bigger idiots.

    • marknesop says:

      Unfortunately, there is no ‘comment’ section, but I would just have pointed out that according to their Wiki entry, the Institute for Economics and Peace prides itself on “…developing new conceptual frameworks to define peacefulness, providing metrics for measurement, uncovering the relationship between peace, business, and prosperity, and by promoting a better understanding of the cultural, economic, and political factors that drive peacefulness.”

      When you write the criteria yourself which will inform your rankings, it is not difficult to steer them in a less objective and more political direction. As Danielle points out, some rankings – perhaps many – are based not on actual occurrences but on the ‘perception’ that they might occur. And perceptions are driven by – what else? – the media. What’s the language of the media an institution like the Institute for Economics and Peace is likely to draw nearly all its sampling from? Not Russian.

  7. PaulR says:

    An interesting documentary in The Guardian about the Night Wolves of Lugansk. If nothing else, these guys do at least know how to shape a beret: http://www.theguardian.com/news/video/2016/jan/29/the-night-wolves-putins-motorbiking-militia-of-luhansk-video

    • marknesop says:

      And that is an underappreciated art. Think of all the martyrs who passed from an exploded skull while wearing a wet beret.

    • Patient Observer says:

      Hi Paul R, thanks for the bonanza of idiocy! My favorite bit was:

      “Since his catastrophic decision to prevent Ukraine from signing an Association Agreement with the European Union in 2013, he has committed strategic blunder after strategic blunder. ”

      Russia is blundering its way to independence and thwarting the murderous rampage (oops, meant to say US foreign policy) sparing millions of lives in the process.

      Blunder on I say!

  8. Lyttenburgh says:

    1) Special for Karl: The birth rate in Finland fell to the level of 1860-s famine

    “The birth rate in Finland has been declining for last five years, according to the Finland Times, citing data from the Statistical Centre of the country.

    Last year, there were born 55 040 children, which is 2 190 fewer than in 2014. Fewer number of children had only been born during the famine in the 1860s.

    Thus, the natural population growth, or the difference between births and deaths, was only 2 960 people.

    Despite the low birth rate, the population of the country over the past year still increased – due to immigration. The number of residents in Finland have increased by 14 860: during the processing of the data wasn’t considered the number of arrivals to the country of the asylum-seekers who have not been granted refugee status.

    At the moment a population of the country is 5,486,616 people.”

    ^That’s about half of Moscow – without illegals. What’s the matter, Karl? Your country is democratic, nearly 100 years like free, a successful EU state – why so glum situation in the field of demography?

    And I remind everyone, that Rushka-downshifter due to tyrant Putin’s initiatives actually improves its demographic situation yearly – a fact, that even Mark Adomanis have to admit. Why the West can’t improve its demographics the same way? Too tyranical to give money to the people for the birth of the 2nd and consequent babies?

    2) More on Ruskha-downshifter: Russia’s international reserves rose by $ 1 billion this week

    “Downfall of the regime is imminent” (c)

  9. Patient Observer says:

    “Wall Street was higher on Friday after weak GDP data raised expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve would go slow on future interest rate hikes.”
    https://finance.yahoo.com/news/wall-st-weak-gdp-raises-143720723.html

    It IS a bubble market. Only zero cost money keeps stock prices up – not fundamental economic performance.

  10. Moscow Exile says:

    US economic growth slows sharply

    And that’s without suffering an onslaught of economic sanctions.

    What was Obama saying to Congress about the US economy the other week …?

  11. Lyttenburgh says:

    And now for something completely different [Lyt’s desk explodes]

    Chinese soldiers singing Serbian war song aka “REMOVE KEBAB”

    Serbia stronk! God is a Serb!

    • Moscow Exile says:

      In the early ’90s, several Western journalists here knew full well the nature of Mister-Nice-Guy Khodorkovsky and were not afraid to say so. This was before Khodorkovsky had transformed himself into a humanitarian democrat who anguished over the sorrows of the oppressed Russian masses and who sported a shaved head and had lost several pounds in weight thanks to his cruel imprisonment by the tyrannical regime.


      Mister-Nice-Guy in the presence of the former drunken, boorish First President of Russia.


      Two Mister-Nice-Guys


      St. Mikhail of the Gulag

      I wish I could find it now (and I have tried to many times), but I clearly recall a lengthy article written by a Western journalist (it might have appeared in the Moscow Tribune, which I often read: it was far better than that arse-wipe the Moscow Times), in which its author penned a lengthy criticism of Khodorkovsky. The journalist in question might have had a personal grudge as well: I recall how he described in that article how he had been roughed up by one of Mister-Nice-Guy’s hoodlums when trying to approach their boss with a view to his making a statement. It must have been about 1993 when I read this piece.

      And then things went quiet on the “journalistic” front: they were scared. Then along came an innocent like a lamb to the slaughter: in late 1996, Paul Klebnikov decided to dish the dirt on Berezovsky: “”Is Boris Berezovsky the godfather of Russia’s godfathers?” wrote Klebnikov, “It sure looks that way”. He then went on to write a book in 2000 about the “Mafia State” when it indeed was so: “Godfather of the Kremlin: Boris Berezovsky and the Looting of Russia”. Then in 2003 Klebnikov was chosen to be the first editor of the Russian edition of Forbes. Under Klebnikov’s editorship there were only four editions of Forbes Russia, one of which having an article covering Russia’s 100 wealthiest individuals.

      Klebnikov was then liquidated; nothing smart or fancy about his elimination — no need for that in those days: no mysterious poison that only the Russians and Chinese use or other such nonsense — he just received mortal wounds from four gunshots fired at him from a passing car as he left the Moscow Forbes office. He died later in hospital.

      Not all that professional, really — or so it seems to me — not that I am an expert in such matters.

  12. Cortes. says:

    A real US hero speaks (Owens probably thinks he’s a dupe of VVP))

    http://sputniknews.com/us/20160129/1033951623/loud-clear-kiriakou-interview.html

  13. Cortes. says:

    Unsure if this review of Lavrov’s session with journalists has been posted before. I thought it marvellous:

    https://consortiumnews.com/2016/01/29/a-russian-diplomats-take-on-the-world/

    linked to on turcopolier.typepad by annamaria.

    • Lyttenburgh says:

      Awesome article – Lavrov rocks, he even didn’t have to say his new catch-phrase describing the journos out loud ;). Analysis on the part of the author is more or less good, but I disagree completely on his rosy view that sanctions will be lifted this year. And not just because I’m a pessimist (“I’m not a pessimist”, I keep saying, – “I’m a realist”).

      EUrocrats just simply can’t lift sanctions, because doing that requires:

      – “Implementation of Minsk-2” (no one pulled their collective stupid tongue at that – now Poroshenko can do nothing and blame Northern Mordor for his woes while receiving gesheft from the bleedin’ hearts Westerners)
      – A real ceasefire on the frontline in Donbass without nearly daily shellings (like hell it will happened).
      – The victory of the proper EUrocrats within the EU over Euro-Atlantiists with their Russophobic agenda (again – extreamly unlikely)
      – Washington’s clear and loud command to the collective West that, yes, it’s okay to lift the sanctions (and the lame-duck Obama won’t do that).

      • Special_sauce says:

        what’s that hashtag #WELOVEROV ? clever

      • marknesop says:

        I agree with you; Europe would dearly love to lift sanctions, but even with the French noises about it, European leaders are still in thrall to Washington and Washington is so invested in crushing Russia (and so idiotically convinced that it will collapse any minute now if it just bears down) that I would not be surprised to see Obama double down. They must hope Browder is going to be able to guilt Dave the pig-fancier into signing on to the Magnitsky Act.

        • Nat says:

          My prediction is that sanctions against Russia as a country will be lifted so that trade can resume, but new sanctions against individuals who they perceive as Putin’s friends or even Putin himself will be introduced/remain in place.

          • marknesop says:

            That’s possible, but if that’s the way it happens it will be an admission of utter and crashing defeat, because (a) targeted sanctions against individuals are easy to overcome except for travel sanctions (ie: where money is concerned the individual can always have someone else borrow it in his behalf and once Russia and China use SWIFT less it will be harder for the west to track the movement of money), and (b) the entire rationale for imposing sanctions on the nation was that the population would blame Putin and rise up to cast him out. Acknowledging that that has failed is acknowledgment that the entire effort has failed, and keeping any of it in place is only so Washington can console itself that it is making an effort. Moreover, and by far more important, the desirability of western brands has been much, much reduced because of Russian anger against the EU for being such a milquetoast and pawn of Washington, while dislike of Washington and the American brand in particular was not so high even during the Cold War. Lavrov was a prophet when he said things will not go back to business as usual, because Russia has demonstrated for Russians that it is possible to survive quite well without pricey western fripperies, and that serving western food brands is in fact a form of snobbery which does not flatter the Russian character. The difference in mindset will provoke a paradigm shift just as Lavrov describes. The west will still sell merchandise and products, but I believe the scale will be much reduced and Russians will seriously ask themselves if there is a comparable non-western alternative before buying. At the same time, a great deal more domestic effort will go into producing quality Russian products or importing non-western ones now that manufacturers have consumer loyalty on their side. In some fields, the west is just going to drop out altogether where it formerly enjoyed a healthy market share, and American brands will be punished more severely than others. In some instances where the USA enjoyed a dominant and worthwhile advantage, you might even see them move their production to Europe and rebrand it so as to mask its origins, even though Washington pretends Russia is not a significant American market. Overall, it probably is not, but the picture looks different from company perspectives.

          • kirill says:

            In this case the Russian government should impose sanctions against NATO member states (not individuals) in retaliation. NATO should not get to decide the rules of the game.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      In the above-linked Consortium News article, Doktorow writes:

      In keeping with custom, the Russian Foreign Ministry posted the entire video recording of Lavrov’s press conference on youtube.com and posted transcripts in Russian and English on the http://www.mid.ru site. The Russian version takes up 26 tightly spaced printed pages. This is what I have used, since I prefer to go to the source and do my own translations when I have the option. The English version probably takes 40 pages, given the normal expansion from Russian to English in the translation process.

      That is rather strange! In my experience, a Russian translation of an English text is usually longer than the English original and vice-versa.

      English is largely an uninflected, analytical language and, unlike most Slavic languages, has articles. English, therefore uses more words to express the same ideas as expressed in Russian. However, many of these English words seem to be shorter than their Slavic equivalents, and this generally results in English translations having more words but fewer characters than their Slavic originals.

      Take for example the long English word “sightseeing”, which in Russian is “осмотр достопримечательностей”, whereas “My wife had been cooking dinner for 3 hours when I arrived home” (lots of short auxiliary verbs to indicate tense and aspect) is in Russian: “Жена уже готовила ужин в течение 3 часов, когда я приехал домой” (the Russian verb forms have the tense and aspect (perfective or imperfective) “built-in”, as it were).

      According to this source, Russian-English/English-Russian translated texts apparently tend to expand or shrink as follows:

      From English into Russian:+15%

      From Russian into English: -5% to -15%

      • marknesop says:

        Perhaps he meant it had been translated into English the west will understand, which might well shorten it considerably. The entire economic aspect of the discussion could be reduced, for example, to “Y’all chumps done fell out of the stupid tree, an’ hit every branch on the way down”. Except for the probability that the Russian market will be opened up again to the west as soon as sanctions are dropped, but “Suck on that” does not add too much to this section. The whole Minsk Accords portion could be trimmed to “I see what you did there, and I guess you think you are dealing with simpletons. You are not.”

        Lavrov is a brilliant diplomat, and the clumsy, nearly inarticulate way the buffoon Brian Whitmore at RFE/RL feels he must ridicule his address speaks volumes about what a hole the USA has dug for itself. It cannot reverse course now, no matter how disadvantageous it will be to press on with a failed strategy. I don’t think you need to look for any relaxation of sanctions talk from Washington, and I would not be surprised to see it double down instead, hoping to capitalize on what it perceives as momentum and soldarity from the British verdict on the Litvinenko murder. I would not send the Obama government outside to take the temperature, it is so bad at reading global opinion. There is more economic pain in store before things start to improve, but you can lay most of it at Washington’s feet; because its lack of imagination, misreading of international events and tone-deaf self-adulation combine to narrow its options.

    • Lyttenburgh says:

      “Military Leak Reveals Sweden Readying for War With ‘Qualified Opponent'”

      Yeåh, Finlånd quålifies to be such öppönent. All these tålks åböut Russiä åre just måskirövkä. They cleärly wånt tö recreåte their Empire, karl, with Finns ås löyål subjects ånd the cånnön födder for the future wårs öf the Börkpocalypse.

    • marknesop says:

      Amazing. Here it is in full-size, sourced from “Raw Story”. Don’t go off the provided page by using the tabs at the top, or you won’t be able to get back – all you can see is the request. But that’s damning enough. The phrase “This traffic blending provides excellent cover and powerful deniability” really says it all, although there is much, much more. Can’t wait for the next yodeling chowderhead who asks me “How are things at 55 Savushkina St., Comrade?”

      • Jen says:

        Some of us here may have been lucky to have seen a troll busted for using two personas in one of the Komment Macht Frei forums over at The Guardian. The troll was replying to a commenter but did not stay in character. The software the troll was using must have either rolled over to the next persona or the troll hit a wrong key. Off-guardian.org pounced on that exposure and made a post out of it, as the moderators at The Guardian failed to ban the troll.

  14. Warren says:

    Published on 28 Jan 2016
    Check Keiser Report websitefor more: http://www.maxkeiser.com/

    In this episode of the Keiser Report coming to you from Moscow, Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert are joined by Ben Aris of BNE.eu to discuss the latest from the Russian economy as it confronts a falling ruble, trade wars and self-imposed sanctions. They look on the bright side of these sanctions which has seen a renaissance in the Russian food scene and they examine accusations from a leading British commentator that Russia can never develop a Google . . . uh, despite having a Yandex, the biggest tech company in Europe. They also look at asset stripping banks in Russia to buy property in London and the reserve fund being used for precisely what it was accumulated to do.

    • marknesop says:

      They (US analysts and pundits) frequently compare services, technology and infrastructure between a country of 142 million and one of 320 million as if they expected them to be the same and anything less is a failure. In some ways it could certainly be improved; services and infrastructure on a municipal level are comparable between Canada and the USA for cities of comparable size, and we only have 35 million overall. The USA doesn’t have any cities as big as Moscow, so it’s hard to compare, but some of America’s biggest cities don’t stack up that well. A lot of it has to do with ratio and tax base – naturally it is more likely you will find a Sergey Brin or a Steve Jobs among 320 million people than you will among 142 million, just as you will have a better chance of finding a superior athlete although that advantage is muted somewhat by the American diet and fast-foods lifestyle. And there is also the simplicity of providing superior services when your tax base is more than twice as large and your per-capita GDP is higher. Russia is doing very well for its population size relative to the size of its territory, and when the acceleration in lifestyle and influence and interconnection with the global economy is considered just within the framework of the Putin years it is little short of remarkable. The west is naturally suspicious of any individual who has so enriched his country in such a brief period, and who sprang from such a humble background, without skimming off billions for himself.

      • Jen says:

        If a city is defined as a set of otherwise independent self-governing urban areas sharing a common labour pool – as in a self-governing city with a downtown area surrounded by other self-governing towns and small cities, and in each of those places the majority of residents commute to the downtown area 5 days a week to work – then New York City ends up with a population of 20 million and Moscow with 17 million. The beauty of using this definition of a city allows you to compare Moscow and New York’s private and public transport systems and how well they cater to their respective commuter populations.
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_metropolitan_area
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_metropolitan_area#Combined_Statistical_Area

      • Alexey says:

        I’m sorry but as someone who can compare Russian and American services I think you need to make important distinction. Some hi tech services like Google compared to Yandex, or hotel and restaurant service may be better in US. But by God Almighty New York subway compared to Moscow looks more befitting Zimbabwe than one of the most developed countries in the World. And same goes for many other public services. They suck BIG time in US.

        • dany8538 says:

          Please don’t bring up the NY metro system or I might lose it. It is an absolute disgrace. I use the train every day to get to Manhattan and by God it is always an adventure. Train traffic, stalled train, signal problems,. etc. and lets not even get started on what the stations themselves look like. Moscow’s subway is a freaking museum, its absolutely beautiful and when I was going to school everyday using the metro system it was an absolute pleasure with ridiculously short waits in the morning and I NEVER ever remember sitting in a train and hearing the phrase ” there is train traffic ahead of us, we apologize for the inconvenience”.

  15. Cortes. says:

    Begins with Arabia’s “April Glaspie moment” and ends with Qatar’s influence on the great Kremlin Stooge Bull Market Sweepstake.

    http://sputniknews.com/columnists/20160129/1033920936/saudi-arabia-plays-russian-roulette.html

    • marknesop says:

      Marvelous. Wheels within wheels. But the real money shot in the whole thing is the word I was looking for but was unable to summon – Russia is going on a diplomatic offensive. Far from being pushed into a corner, whimpering, with its hands over its face, Russia patiently held its ground and waited for the pressure against it to subside, knowing it could not be maintained. Now it is starting from almost exactly where this thing started, but it is the west that is backing up. It reminds me once again of what I said just a day or two ago (not here, though, I don’t think); the Obama government is even more dysfunctional than the Bush government was, and even though it is perhaps not as bad from the self-interest perspective (arguable), it is not nearly so organized and there are frequently several departments or factions working at cross purposes.

  16. Moscow Exile says:


    In Borispol a decision has been made about the territory on which a Roshen plant is to be built

    Borispol city council has reached a decision regarding “planning permission details of the territory enclosed by Prevokzalnaya, Shirokaya, Doroshenko and Heroes of Krut Streets in Borispol”. This decision is part of the city construction department planning permission regulations issued to Roshen for the building of a new plant in Borispol.

    I thought the Ukraine was near bankruptcy.

    I though the Pig had no more interests in Roshen.

    • marknesop says:

      Perhaps he is hedging against an upcoming return to the business milieu.

    • Lyttenburgh says:

      “I thought the Ukraine was near bankruptcy.

      I though the Pig had no more interests in Roshen.”

      Bah, Kremlenite lies! How can you call acountry poor if its shy and modest president just earned his first $ billion?

      • Moscow Exile says:

        Well that snow-scooper that has two gathering arms was invented a long while ago. They used them down the pit as loaders off a heading. They were called Joy-loaders after their inventor, a US miner called Joe Joy.

        The first model was introduced in 1922. The scooped up coal was fed by a back-conveyor to lined up “tubs” (little narrow gauge waggons) which, when filled, were sent to the pit bottom using an endless rope haulage system.


        A joy loader in action in action underground

    • kirill says:

      I recall that there were bigger snow clearing machines back in the day in the USSR. They would melt the snow in a large compartment in the back and dump the water I presume into the sewers. I guess these days they care more about toxics in the snow. But things were cleaner in terms of pollution in the long lost past.

      • Moscow Exile says:

        They still do that. They have snow boilers and the melt goes straight down the surface water drains and thence into the Moscow river.

        Pictures below taken in Moscow on January 13, 2016:

        All the documentary, promotional bulletins that I have recently seen on this matter say that the snow is mixed with water from the sewers. I do not think that is true: if it were, there would be a hell of a stink where those snow boilers are situated. I think this sewer-water statement is a mistranslation: the snow melt goes into the surface water drains — the storm drains, if you will, for rain-water and thence to the Moscow river. They also tip the snow directly into the river at special snow-dumping stages on the river embankment.

        I noticed the other week that it is nearly all new plant that the Moscow city highways department uses:

        Here is a photo of a local highways depot taken in summer:

  17. Wikispooks says:

    Further to my comment above I have now posted this on Wikispooks here. I will get full details of the site up as and when – and hope to post more of the remarkable stuff available here.

    FI of readers and commenters: Wikispooks is not a blog. It aims to emulate Wikipedia – ie an encyclopedia of sorts – but absent the ‘official narrative’ bias. It also has some whiz-bang sematic web capabilities which make it very SE friendly and facilitate auto-collection of content. Regular backups are aviable to anyone so hopefully it will not just disappear one day.

    Any help fleshing outs its somewhat sparse (at present) content would be welcome.

  18. Wikispooks says:

    Oops. That should be HERE
    Sorry

  19. Moscow Exile says:


    Believe me , Vlad … sorry, Vladimir … I didn’t say bad things about you: it was just those neocon guys at the State Department and the Treasury. I just can’t control them … honest injun — I mean, honest Native American!

  20. Lyttenburgh says:

    Some people already forgot – but we still remember how 2 years ago yasnovelmozni pan Petro Olexeich Poroshenko invaded Crimea in a bid to liberate it from vatniks and rushkovans:

    And from then on the Great Ukraine suffered only victories on the battlefields!

    СУГС!

    • marknesop says:

      “The lifetime cost of each F35 (procurement and operation and maintenance) will make each 32000 pound plane cost more than its equivalent in gold by weight.”

      As I live and breathe, that looks like someone turning the west’s “The road to Sochi could have been paved with black caviar” trick back on itself!

  21. kirill says:

    A picture worth a thousand words. While in “backward and inferior” Russia they build railways like this in “superior west” Canada the main rail link between Toronto and Montreal looks like this:

    That doesn’t stop the state propaganda agency known as the CBC from spewing anti-Russian libel and smear 24/7/365.

    • Patient Observer says:

      Technically, it will be 24/7/366 this year.

    • Moscow Exile says:

      There’s a lengthy curve in the double-track mainline that runs past my dacha territory. This line is the main route running southwest out of the Belorussky terminus in Moscow for Smolensk, Minsk, Warsaw and Berlin and carries heavy traffic (coal and crude mainly) and fast expresses. The curve, therefore, suffers heavy wear and the whole lot is replaced every few years.

      The replacement is fascinating to watch and done by a long train consisting of specialist machines that lift the old track, re-ballast the track bed and then lay new concrete ties, onto which new welded rails are then drawn off a mile-long train of flat-cars. I think the welded rails have a length of about 2 kilometres and are joined by welded scarf joints — all done automatically, of course, by another special train of specialized equipment.

      The whole new section is then checked by a laboratory train (that is what is painted on the side of its carriages), inside of which are sensors that check-out the welds and alignment etc. You can see engineers and technicians on board this laboratory train peering at monitors and banks of measuring equipment that prints out data as regards the track below.

      Then, last but not least, the whole new section is checked by gangs of platelayers.

      Interestingly, the bosses of these teams of platelayers are often women.

      The whole job is done over one weekend.

      • kirill says:

        Thanks for sharing that. It demonstrates that Russia routinely uses state of the art rail laying technology. People in Russia can experience rail service with reasonable speeds. Here in Canada, the busiest route has the same speed as the highway (at most 120 km/h) and in some sections the whole train lurches from side to side as if it is about to roll over.

        People living in glass houses should not throw bricks …

      • Moscow Exile says:

        I watched the very same two summers ago near my dacha.

        Trouble was, though, that the deep drainage channel that the machine dug out and the old ballast that they just chucked alongside it on its side furthest from the railway destroyed our once good path that led between the line and a pine forest towards our dacha territory.

        Two years have gone by since then and a new pathway has been tramped out, but it is still bumpy because of patches of old ballast that has not quite been trodden into the pathway yet.

        I used to be able to tear along that path on my mountain bike, but not now.

        The machinery is, by the way, German made.

  22. Warren says:

    Turkey says Russia violated its airspace near Syria border

    Turkey has accused Russia of again violating its airspace and warned it would “face consequences” if such infringements continue.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-35449152

    • Didn’t Kerry just visit Turkey? Turkey might be up for new tricks. Hopefully Russia is prepared this time.

    • kirill says:

      So we are supposed to take their word for it?

      Turdkey better be careful or its attack jets will be falling out of the sky.

    • Patient Observer says:

      Why didn’t they shoot down the plane?

    • marknesop says:

      Blow me, Erdogan. Any time you’re ready to start swinging, you just go on.

      That’s all, folks; I’m out. Gotta go catch the boat to Vancouver, and on to a night flight to Miami. Be good to each other; Cortes can have the largely symbolic crown of moderator until I get back in a couple of weeks. Try not to become drunk with power, Caligula.

      • yalensis says:

        Bad choice, Mark.
        By the time you return to restore order, Cortes will be staging mass public orgies and appointing his horse Deputy Moderator. I predict “bardak” ensues.

      • Cortes. says:

        Caligula (“Babyboots” his father’s army’s nickname for him after being togged up as a mini me on parade in Germany) is the victim of gross calumny I think. He had a great sense of humour and that pissed people off. The story of his great victory over the Sea is hilarious. He was probably guilty of lack of gravitas more than anything else and even 2000 years ago demonisation took place. No doubt there have been raving nutcases in positions of power, but the accumulation of charges levelled against Caligula have the disgusting reek of victors’ justice.
        Back to business. Having once upon a time had familiarity with the Civil Law plus Roman Criminal Law I shall apply the lightest of touch (none) during my honorary Urban Praetorship.
        Enjoy your holiday, Mark!

      • Jen says:

        Did he say Caligula?

  23. Patient Observer says:

    Putin “orders” Russia to develop a vaccine to the Zika virus:

    http://www.newsweek.com/russia-developing-zika-virus-vaccine-421136

    Other articles I have read indicated that a vaccine will take many years. Lets hope Russian biotech succeeds again as they apparently did with the Ebola vaccine. It’s as if…. they actually cared for their fellow humans. What a bunch of losers!

    In Karl’s view, this probably means that Russians are weak because this effort will not cause harm to their enemies nor enrich themselves.

    Regardless, if Russian science is successful and the US does not prohibit the vaccine’s use in the US, it will be good news for us Americans. It will be great news for Latin America.

    • kirill says:

      I think Putin realizes that there is a deadly game being played here. This Zika outbreak is a total anomaly given the previous history of Zika “epidemics” (there basically were none after the virus was discovered in 1947). I am quite sure that the global warming explanation for the current outbreak is not valid and it is a viral mutation. The question is whether such viral mutations are natural or genetic engineering experiments. Don’t assume that testing can all be done in a lab. Labs can’t handle millions of infection samples and the more samples the better the model of the disease. Biowarfare has lots of appeal. So weaponization of viruses is not a paranoid delusion but an active area of covert government activity. Russia is sending its enemies a clear signal that it has the ability to fight back by neutralizing the potential bioweapons, i.e. modified viruses.

      • Patient Observer says:

        I do fear that the newest battlefield is the biosphere. Only madmen enraged by fear would risk the human race which, unfortunately, describes the Western elites. The US seems fond of setting up “biological research stations” such as this:

        http://www.veteranstoday.com/2016/01/13/vanishing-bio-weapons-lab-in-georgia-republic-2016-update/

        IIRC, the US is setting up a bio station in Ukraine as well. I’m sure it’s for strictly humanitarian purposes; perhaps a benign virus to correct defects in the Russian genome.

        • cartman says:

          Sierra Leon and Liberia both host (or hosted) US bioweapons labs. One of them is in Kenema where the ebola outbreak was first reported.

      • Jen says:

        I have seen some news that the outbreaks of Zika virus in particular parts of Brazil (mainly the northeast parts which have long been extremely poor) coincide with the release of GM Aedes mosquitoes in those areas in July 2012 and in 2015 (the latter year by Oxitec) to control outbreaks of yellow fever and dengue fever.
        http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-01-29/zika-outbreak-epicenter-same-area-genetically-modified-mosquitoes-released-2015

        ” … The particular strain of Oxitec GM mosquitoes, OX513A, are genetically altered so the vast majority of their offspring will die before they mature — though Dr. Ricarda Steinbrecher published concerns in a report in September 2010 that a known survival rate of 3-4 percent warranted further study before the release of the GM insects. Her concerns, which were echoed by several other scientists both at the time and since, appear to have been ignored — though they should not have been.

        Those genetically-modified mosquitoes work to control wild, potentially disease-carrying populations in a very specific manner. Only the male modified Aedes mosquitoes are supposed to be released into the wild — as they will mate with their unaltered female counterparts. Once offspring are produced, the modified, scientific facet is supposed to ‘kick in’ and kill that larvae before it reaches breeding age — if tetracycline is not present during its development. But there is a problem …

        … According to an unclassified document from the Trade and Agriculture Directorate Committee for Agriculture dated February 2015, Brazil is the third largest in “global antimicrobial consumption in food animal production” — meaning, Brazil is third in the world for its use of tetracycline in its food animals. As a study by the American Society of Agronomy, et. al., explained, “It is estimated that approximately 75% of antibiotics are not absorbed by animals and are excreted in waste.” One of the antibiotics (or antimicrobials) specifically named in that report for its environmental persistence is tetracycline.

        In fact, as a confidential internal Oxitec document divulged in 2012, that survival rate could be as high as 15% — even with low levels of tetracycline present. “Even small amounts of tetracycline can repress” the engineered lethality. Indeed, that 15% survival rate was described by Oxitec:

        ‘After a lot of testing and comparing experimental design, it was found that [researchers] had used a cat food to feed the [OX513A] larvae and this cat food contained chicken. It is known that tetracycline is routinely used to prevent infections in chickens, especially in the cheap, mass produced, chicken used for animal food. The chicken is heat-treated before being used, but this does not remove all the tetracycline. This meant that a small amount of tetracycline was being added from the food to the larvae and repressing the [designed] lethal system.”

        Even absent this tetracycline, as Steinbrecher explained, a “sub-population” of genetically-modified Aedes mosquitoes could theoretically develop and thrive, in theory, “capable of surviving and flourishing despite any further” releases of ‘pure’ GM mosquitoes which still have that gene intact. She added, “the effectiveness of the system also depends on the [genetically-designed] late onset of the lethality. If the time of onset is altered due to environmental conditions … then a 3-4% [survival rate] represents a much bigger problem…”

        As the WHO stated in its press release, “conditions associated with this year’s El Nino weather pattern are expected to increase mosquito populations greatly in many areas” ‘ …”

        Here is a press release by Oxitec proclaiming the success of its introduction of GM mosquitoes in Juazeiro do Norte, NE Brazil, in wiping out mosquitoes carrying dengue and yellow fever:
        http://www.oxitec.com/press-release-oxitec-mosquito-works-to-control-aedes-aegypti-in-dengue-hotspo/

        Other websites suggest that the microencephaly in babies is due not to their pregnant mothers being infected with the Zika virus but the women having been in contact with pesticides known to cause the condition in foetuses, or having been vaccinated with poorly tested vaccines made by Western companies.
        http://www.activistpost.com/2016/01/zika-freakout-the-hoax-and-the-covert-op-continue.html

        • kirill says:

          Yes, there are many of these strange coincidences. But I think that claim that Zika is not involved is not supported by the evidence. The number of microcephaly cases has surged by a huge factor well outside of any case variance. Factors such as pesticides and poor vaccines have been around for much longer than this outbreak.

          • Jen says:

            The outbreaks of Zika virus infection in Brazil are recent. Zika virus was unknown in Brazil until last year and the strain that is responsible for the current outbreaks has been traced to French Polynesia. The thinking is that the Zika virus arrived in Brazil with a traveller from French Polynesia (possibly during the world sprint canoe championships held in Brazil last year as four teams from that region where Zika virus has become endemic competed) who was bitten by a local mosquito.
            http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4593458/
            http://abcnews.go.com/Health/zika-virus-outbreak-brazil-linked-major-sporting-events/story?id=36575321

            The scale of the problems associated with Zika in Brazil could be attributed in part to populations having had no previous exposure to it and therefore being especially vulnerable (in much the same way that indigenous Americans and Australians died in droves after exposure to influenza brought by European colonists in the past), together with having suppressed immunity due to long-term exposure to dengue fever, chikungunya, yellow fever and other chronic diseases, and exposure to pesticides, GM foods and possibly poor or improperly stored vaccines. Pesticides are replaced by new pesticides whose long-term effects may not be known or understood and the same goes for vaccines. Also the Zika virus outbreak so far is restricted to NE Brazil which is an extremely poor area and it’s a fact that poor populations are often subjected to mass medical experiments (actual experiments or indirect experiments, as in having GM seeds or untested pesticides forced on them which have the effect of causing allergies, cancers, infertility, stillbirths or birth defects among other things) by governments and corporations without their knowledge or consent.

      • Cortes. says:

        Zola in NE Brazil, swine flu in Eastern Ukraine. Both areas being subjected to land grabs. See this for Brazil

        http://www.jstor.org/stable/25765706?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents

  24. Patient Observer says:

    http://sputniknews.com/business/20160130/1033972404/germany-poland-nord-stream.html

    So Nord Stream would only be approved by the EU if Russia continues to supply gas via Ukraine? The article also implied that Poland needs Russian gas which can only be provided by Ukraine. This suggests that there is insufficient pipeline capacity from Germany to cover that amount of gas.

    The article also states that Nord Stream would cover shortages in gas flow through Urkaine were disrupted:

    “Germany says the Nord Stream-2 pipeline will mitigate declining European gas production and the possible disruption of supplies via the war-torn Ukraine, Reuters reported.”

    Seem like preparation for a probable cessation of Russian gas via Ukraine. However, construction will only start in 2019 (per the article) unless events force an earlier start.
    (reposted to make it a little more visible).

    • yalensis says:

      On the topic of Ukrainian gas, or lack thereof, I posted this on my blog today.

      Executive summary: Porky first claimed that “reverse gas” from the EU was cheaper than Russian gas; and then, on the same day, bragged how Ukraine refused to buy 30% “cheaper Russian gas” as a matter of principle.

  25. Warren says:

    More from our favourite Tyke Kholkhal Taras Kuzio:

    Published on 22 Jan 2016
    “Violence, Criminality and Russian and Eurasian Nationalism:
    What does the Legacy of the Yanukovych Regime Tell Us about
    Ukrainian and Russian politics?”
    Taras Kuzio (by SKYPE)

  26. Moscow Exile says:

    Yukie trash:

    Putin without the theatrical make-up

    Meet the President of the Russian Federation

    …sporting typically Soviet/Russian criminal-style tattoos!

    From being a macho-leader, Vladimir Putin has been speedily transformed by resonant international investigations into a criminal and rabidly corrupt person.

    And with no evidence whatsoever as regards this accusation having been presented by these “resonant international investigations”!

  27. Moscow Exile says:

    And from another Yukie site yet more shit from a now dead piece of living human shite:

    Traitors are despised everywhere and always…

    “To all the inhabitants of South-Eastern Ukraine, who so passionately desire to become part and parcel of Russia, I shall say one thing: You would be bad citizens in any state because traitors are despised everywhere. I am confident that if someone offers you more than Russia has, then you will once again quickly announce a ‘referendum’. But no one has offered you anything yet. And by the way, that includes Russia. *Mark my words!”

    Valeriya Novodvorskaya

    *The expression Зарубите у себя на носу that the late and not lamented Novodvorskaya uses at the end of the above tirade is quite rude. It means literally “Cut a notch into your nose!”. More politely, one would say in English: “Commit this to memory” or, more colloquially, “Mark my words!” or “Put that down in your notebook!”

    The term she uses arises from the time when people made notches on a “nose” – a special wooden board, which they used to carry around as a memory aid.

    I wonder if Novodvorkaya would have addressed a similar missive to the Founding Fathers of the United States of America in 1776, for they too were at that time, all traitors to the British Crown when they signed their Declaration of Independence or, as Benjamin Franklin, one of those Founding Fathers, rightly said on signing that declaration:

    “We must, indeed, all hang together or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately”.

    He was right too — bloody traitor!

    🙂

    • Moscow Exile says:

      There shouldn’t be a comma in the first translated line of that dead freak’s announcement above as the relative subordinate clause “who so passionately desire to become part and parcel of Russia” is a defining relative clause. With that comma left in place, the sentence would imply that all inhabitants of South-East Ukraine wish that where they live become part of Russia.

    • Lyttenburgh says:

      Transl: “You, sovoks! You will answer for everything! God’s judgement is upon you!”

  28. Moscow Exile says:

    And even more Yukie shite:

    В США лучшим место для жизни назвали район, в котором живут украинцы

    The best places to live in the USA are those where Ukrainians live

    Of the 32 parts of the USA that have been reviewed by professionals involved in real estate in America, the best would be named “The Ukrainian District” writes Joinfo.ua with reference to channel 5.

    Such a conclusion was specifically made by specialists at the Redfin Agency, which conducted a comparative analysis, stressing that where the Ukrainian diaspora had settled was literally a great place to live.

    “It is a quiet area that shares borders on all sides with business centres and places of recreation and entertainment”, said the agency.

    In addition, signboards in Ukrainian and Ukrainian blue and yellow flags have lately begun to abound in the area and more and more shops, restaurants and apartments have appeared there.

    • cartman says:

      Where is this area, and where are any of these places? The image above looks like Detroit.

        • Moscow Exile says:

          They’ll be moving into Flint next, I should imagine.

        • Jen says:

          ‘Report Names Chicago “Corruption Capital of America”– Again’

          Source: http://www.nbcchicago.com/blogs/ward-room/Report-Names-Chicago-Corruption-Capital-of-America—Again-305343521.html#ixzz3yrPAYZl2

          First two sentences of the article published 28 May 2015 read:
          “Chicago has maintained its first-place status, but not for something for which the city should be proud.

          The city was once again named the corruption capital of America, according to a report released Thursday by the University of Illinois at Chicago …”

          ‘Nuff said.

          Also when people say “Chicago-style politics”, they nearly always use the term with heavy sarcasm or irony.

          No wonder Banderites love Chicago! 🙂

          • Patient Observer says:

            Chicago politics is corrupt but they do seem to often get things right. It is a beautiful city in many respects, has a relatively decent mass transit system, plenty of good public museums, good architecture and a great lake front. There is a great deal of poverty and a corrupt police force as well. The Daley dynasty ran Chicago for generations. The second Daley did this for example:

            “Daley infamously ordered the overnight demolition of Meigs Field in 2003, abruptly ending a debate with state leaders about the downtown airport’s future on Northerly Island, which is now a park. ”

            Not to defend the corruption but what some people call corruption is when the special interest lawyers and obstructionists don’t always get their way. I suspect that form of “corruption” may be present in Russia.

            In contrast, Detroit style corruption was of Somalia style where there was not even a pretension of having responsibility to the city population. Interestingly, one may think Flint had similar level of corruption as evidenced by the water crisis, however, Flint was basically being run by the Michigan state government which supposedly was above local corruption. In fact, they were beyond corrupt as they had not interest in the people at all.

          • Moscow Exile says:

            I was working with a native of Illinois when Senator Obama began making a name for himself with his wow-oh-my-god Shakespearian style addresses to stunned audiences. My colleague said at the time that Obama was a bullshitter and must surely be corrupt because of where he was weaned politically. I, in my naivety, believed at the time that my colleague was exaggerating. He then went on to tell me about the levels of corruption that was rife in his home state and, in particular, Chicago. He was not from that city, by the way: he was from some farming town.

            In the same year as Obama’s first 2009 presidential election victory, the Governor of Illinois, Rod Blagojevich, an ethnic Serb, became the first governor of that state to be impeached and removed from office.

            In March 2012, Blagojevich began serving a 14-year sentence in federal prison following conviction for corruption including the solicitation of bribes for political appointments, including the 2008 vacant U.S. Senate seat of then-President-Elect Barack Obama … [having been] found guilty on all charges pertaining to the senate seat, as well as extortion relating to state funds being directed towards a children’s hospital and race track …

            … under federal rules Blagojevich will serve at least 85%, or 12 years, of his sentence after which time he may be eligible for early release (in 2024) based on good behavior. He is the fourth Governor of Illinois to serve time in federal prison; the first three were Otto Kerner, Jr., Dan Walker and George Ryan — Wiki.

    • Fern says:

      I thought it was well established by now – so well established, in fact, that even the Guardian had heard about it – that Litvinenko was not and had never been a spy. It follows, therefore, that he couldn’t have been an ‘ex-spy’ when he died. And aren’t there many substances which can kill and which are virtually impossible to detect unless you know what to look for?

      • Jen says:

        It happened to be a slow news day over at The Guardian, so slow that they had to drag in a neuroscientist rather than a toxicologist to write woffle on a napkin about the amygdala and how difficult it is to sense something that is invisible, silent tasteless and gives off no smell on.

    • kirill says:

      Western media and pundits just can help themselves masturbating with wishful thinking about how “bad” Russia will be “punished”. It is the NATzO west that needs divine retribution and the ceaseless NATzO projection of hate and guilt onto Russia is a manifestation of its own rot.

  29. The hated liberal German Gref is apparently coming back to the Russian government. How about Gref and Kudrin running things financially in Russia?

    • Moscow Exile says:

      Why? Are they supposed to be good at running national economies or something?

      I think Gref and Kudrin are a pair of wankers that only wankers would admire.

      Just my personal opinion.


      Alexey Kudrin – Boris Nemtsov – Alexy Navalny


      Ksenia Sobchak – Alexey Kudrin – Grigory Yavlinsky – Alexey Navalny – Yevgenia Chirikova

      He that walketh with wise men shall be wise: but a companion of fools shall be destroyed

      Proverbs 13:20

    • Moscow Exile says:

      It’s splat a turd against the wall time and see what reaction there will be!

      • Patient Observer says:

        No reaction from me on Karl’s latest feces throwing provocation. He can drain the life force from any sentient being. I suppose it’s a talent of sorts.

    • Lyttenburgh says:

      The hated troll [Censored] is apparently coming back to Kremlin Stooge once in a while to post more unsourced pacnicked rumours and see for the reaction.

      P.S. Karl, how about your marvelous government running things in Finland?

  30. Moscow Exile says:


    I am one of those girls who incinerated Colorados in Odessa! And I am not at all ashamed of this: I am proud of it!</b.

  31. kirill says:

    http://www.rbc.ru/business/31/01/2016/56abb5af9a7947eecfb7910b

    Degenerate western chutzpah. The Italian contractor Saipem that was supposed to participate in the construction of South Stream is demanding 759 million euro in “compensation” for the cancellation.

    Saipem needs to sue Brussels bureaucrats. Gazprom is not obliged to spend a single cent building pipelines for other companies to profit from them. Under Brussels rules, Gazprom would have not real ownership of the South Stream even though it built it.

    • astabada says:

      Notice how Saipem (=Italian Government) waited to secure contracts for 1800 km of pipelines with Iran before demanding compensation from Gazprom.

      Saipem has been a traditional partner of Gazprom, but this decision is bound to break the trust between the two companies.
      The way I interpret this decision is that Saipem knows that there is no possibility of South Stream being built in the foreseeable future.

  32. astabada says:

    For those of you who are interested in the Yemen war, the Yemeni Army and the Houthis have taken control of the small border town of Rabiah, in Southern Saudi Arabia.

    The city is not of “strategic importance”, like al-Masdar News reports. However it is a step further from the small villages the Yemeni Army had taken control before. In fact the Royal Saudi Army (trumpets please) has mounted an offensive to regain the lost town.

    al-Masdar reports that the offensive did not go as originally planned © This is becoming a recurrent pattern for the Saudi offensive against Yemen.

  33. Warren says:

  34. Moscow Exile says:


    Kerry: no more money will be given to the Ukraine

    See: СМИ: Керри настоял на приостановке выделения Украине кредита МВФ

    U.S. Secretary of state John Kerry has persuaded the International Monetary Fund to suspend consideration of the question of issuing a new loan to Kiev because donors are frustrated with the pace of reforms in Ukraine.

  35. Moscow Exile says:

    One day ago:

    Ever ready to use his super intellect and acerbic wit to attack Russia, Bykov once again leaps to the fore, his mighty pen in hand — well, not literally: waddles more like; and his “pen” is his word processor:

    В новом стихотворении “Насильное” известный российский поэт, писатель и журналист Дмитрий Быков в иронической форме обыгрывает историю об “изнасилованной Лизе”, сфабрикованную российскими СМИ.

    In a new poem “Raped”, well-known Russian poet, writer and journalist, Dmitry Bykov ironically plays out the story of “raped Lisa” as fabricated by the Russian media.

    Note “as fabricated by the Russian media”!

    Who has made this claim is unclear: either Bykov or the blogger.

    Background:

    In Berlin, a 12-year-old Russian speaking girl claimed she was kidnapped and raped by Middle Eastern immigrants.

    Protests are made about this alleged rape in Germany.

    The Russian media, unsurprisingly, widely reports the story.

    The Berlin cops then claim that the girl made the whole story up: she “went missing” because she had spent the night at friends, having had problems at school; she also, according to her mother, had psychiatric problems.

    The Russian Foreign Ministry steps in, suggesting that there might have been a cover-up over this girl’s claim.

    See:
    Prosecutors conclude Russian-German teen’s rape allegations were false

    Berlin Prosecutor Dismisses Rape of Russian-Speaking Girl by Migrants

    Russia steps into Berlin ‘rape’ storm claiming German cover-up

    What a ridiculous thing of those Russians to suggest!…

    It seems, however, that not only are such cover-up allegations made against the Swedes!

    See:
    Rotherham child sexual exploitation scandal

    It’s not only Germany that covers up mass sex attacks by migrant men… Sweden’s record is shameful

    Why Did British Police Ignore Pakistani Gangs Abusing 1,400 Rotherham Children? Political Correctness

    So was it unreasonable of the Russian government to suspect that there might have been a cover-up?

    Enter Bykov!

    Who is to blame for all of this?

    The great lump speaks:

    Слышь, Россия, страна-исполин: там насилуют русскую деву, хоть она и свалила в Берлин! Так скажи свое звонкое слово в этот тяжкий, решительный час. Неужели мы вытерпим снова, что повсюду насилуют нас? Почему мы уставились немо, почему не заявим, грозя: пусть мигранты насилуют немок, но насиловать русских нельзя! Чуть поднялись — и снова-здорово. Иль не жаль нам сестер и невест? Привлеките министра Лаврова, пусть он выскажет резкий протест! До чего довели толерасты, либеральщики, черт их возьми.

    Что до Лизы, то бедная Лиза раскололась за несколько дней. От анамнеза до эпикриза все сегодня известно о ней. Предков Лизиных вызвали в школу, предки стали ее бичевать — и за это она, по приколу, не явилась домой ночевать. Стали делать над ней экспертизы — и узнали: с двенадцати лет два любовника было у Лизы, а насилия не было, нет. Так что символ невинности чистой оказался не чище, увы, чем нацисты, садисты, чекисты и другие кумиры Москвы.

    Hear, Russia, ye country of giants! They are raping a Russian maiden there, even though she has landed herself in Berlin! So speak your sonorous word in this difficult, decisive hour. Are we on the rack again, that we are being raped everywhere? Why are we staring on mutely? Why have we not made any threats? Let migrants rape German women, but raping Russians is not permissible! Just raise ourselves that little bit higher and we shall be great once again! — Or have we no pity for our sisters and brides? Call Minister Lavrov’s attention! Let him voice a strong protest! What have these tolerant types, these liberals, brought us to? Fuck them off!…

    What’s with Lisa, poor Lisa, who started spilling the beans after a few days?…

    They started to use their expertise on her and found out that at 12 years of age Lisa had already had two lovers — but there had been no rape. So this symbol of pure innocence turned out to be no purer, alas, than the Nazis, the sadists, the Chekists and other idols of Moscow.

    What a fucking arsehole!

    What has the fact — if it indeed be one — that the girl who claimed she had been raped was not a virgin got to do with all of this?

    That she was not a virgin made her “impure”, as “impure” as the idols of Moscow?

    I repeat: what a fucking arsehole!

  36. Moscow Exile says:

    Why is my last posting awaiting moderation, Señor Cortes?

    • yalensis says:

      Ha ha! I tried to warn you that our new El Hefe would soon become a tyrant.
      But nobody wanted to listen…

    • Cortes. says:

      Gran Capitan is the correct address.

      Anyway, as a techno incompetent, I haven’t the faintest idea. Am I bearer of some magick key or ring to wave about, or more likely waive? Give us a clue!

    • Cortes. says:

      Gran Capitan is the correct address.

      Anyway, as a techno incompetent, I haven’t the faintest idea. Am I bearer of some magick key or ring to wave about, or more likely waive? Give us a clue!

      I’d love to nominate someone better fitted, but am hamstrung by the principle

      Delegatus non potest delegare (a delegated authority may not in turn be delegated). So, if there are technical things I need to know, please share…

      • Moscow Exile says:

        I reckon that what I posted a couple of hours ago went into the sin bin because it has 4 (I think) links in it and one photograph.

      • yalensis says:

        Unless you are able to hack into Mark’s Administrator password, then you are simply a helpless and impotent figurehead. Not unlike Barack Obama!

        • Cortes. says:

          Damn!

          I was soooo looking forward to striking a pose and declaiming

          Oderint, dum metuant

          • yalensis says:

            Sure, sure, Crazy Eyes, anything you say….. [trembling]

            • Cortes. says:

              From Wikipedia

              By the early 19th century, the systematic excavation of ancient Greek sites had brought forth a plethora of sculptures with traces of notably multicolored surfaces, some of which were still visible. Despite this, influential art historians such as Johann Joachim Winckelmann so strongly opposed the idea of painted Greek sculpture that proponents of painted statues were dismissed as eccentrics, and their views were largely dismissed for more than a century.

              It was not until published findings by German archaeologist Vinzenz Brinkmann in the late 20th and early 21st century that the painting of ancient Greek sculptures became an established fact. Using high-intensity lamps, ultraviolet light, specially designed cameras, plaster casts, and certain powdered minerals, Brinkmann proved that the entire Parthenon, including the actual structure as well as the statues, had been painted. He analyzed the pigments of the original paint to discover their composition.

              Brinkmann made several painted replicas of Greek statues that went on tour around the world. Also in the collection were replicas of other works of Greek and Roman sculpture, and he demonstrated that the practice of painting sculpture was the norm rather than the exception in Greek and Roman art.[4] Museums that hosted the exhibit included the Glyptotek Museum in Munich, the Vatican Museum, and the National Archaeological Museum in Athens, et al. The collection made its American debut at Harvard University in the Fall of 2007.[5]

              Mrs C told me of the ridiculous campaign at Edinburgh College of Art to try to find out who had “ruined” the plaster copy statues which lined some corridors by painting them. Mid to late 1980s.

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