Posts categorized "Communism"

May 05, 2008

May Day, Mayday...

Misslemarch Not that anyone in the US appears to have noticed, but Putin's regime thought it a good idea to celebrate May Day with a parade of intercontinental missiles and other heavy weaponry in Moscow's Red Square - something not done since the fall of the Soviet Union:

"MOSCOW, May 5 (RIA Novosti) - Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday that an upcoming display of the country's military hardware in a Victory Day parade in Red Square on May 9 does not mean Moscow is threatening anyone.

"For the first time in many years, military hardware will be involved in the parade. This is not saber-rattling. We threaten no one and do not intend to do so," Putin said at his last meeting with Cabinet and Kremlin administration members.

"It is a simple display of our growing defense capability," he added.

Moscow's Red Square hosted on Monday the final rehearsal for the Victory Day parade, which will feature for the first time in almost two decades a formidable display of Russia's military might.

Victory Day marks the final surrender by Nazi Germany to the U.S.S.R. in WWII, often referred to as the Great Patriotic War in Russia and other states in the former Soviet Union.

After a 17-year break, outgoing President Vladimir Putin gave the go ahead for the resumption of flyovers by strategic bombers and displays of sophisticated military hardware during this year's Victory Day parade.

President Putin's second term has seen a rise in tensions with the West, as a resurgent Russia, awash with oil dollars, looks to reestablish itself as a global power.

By the time Victory Day comes around, however, Russia will have a new president, with Dmitry Medvedev due to be inaugurated on May 7. Putin is set to take up the post of premier, as well as head of the ruling United Russia party, and analysts are at a loss as to predict exactly how this 'power-sharing' will play out.

During the rehearsal for the parade, a crowd of spectators cheered the appearance of formidable T-90 main battle tanks, Smerch multiple-launch rocket systems, S-300 air defense systems, Iskander-M tactical missile systems and Topol-M ballistic missile systems.

Several Tu-160 Blackjack and Tu-95 Bear strategic bombers, a Tu-22M Backfire long-range bomber and Russia's aerobatic teams, Strizhi and Russkiye Vityazi flew over Red Square at an altitude of about 1,000 feet.

The first Victory Parade was held on Red Square on June 24, 1945 on the order of the then-Supreme Commander-in-Chief, Joseph Stalin."

Alone this would not be alarming. But when seen against the rabid nationalism of Putin's Nashi Youth Movement, assassinations of critics, journalists, and Putin's perceived enemies, and Russia's close ties to Communist China should make someone in the US government pay attention. I know that multi-tasking is hard for the Bush administration. Hell, single tasks are even hard for these fine mental all-stars. But someone needs to be paying attention.

April 15, 2008

And now for the Communist delegation...

So we have fascism back in office with the election of Silvio Berlusconi to Prime Minister (for a third time) and just to even out the tyrant playing field, Russian President, soon to be Prime Minister, has also agreed to be the United Russia party chairman at the same time:

"Surprising no one, President Vladimir Putin accepted an offer Tuesday to lead the dominant political party in Russia once he leaves office next month and takes the post of prime minister, potentially setting the stage for years of power-sharing with President-elect Dimitri Medvedev, his hand-picked successor to the Kremlin.

At a party congress that played like a disconcerting mélange of U.S. national political convention, Soviet-era Communist Party Congress and corporate pep rally, Putin agreed to be the chairman of United Russia, a party that has been regarded as an arm of the Kremlin since it was created in 2001.

Until Medvedev takes office May 7, Putin said it would be inappropriate for him to be officially affiliated with a particular party. Once he is prime minister, he said, he sees no such problem, calling a dual party and government role "a perfectly civilized, natural and traditional practice for democratic states."

Between Berlusconi and his friend Putin, Europe is facing some hard-line extremists in the upcoming years. Remember the good old days when it was easy to tell the bad guys from the good guys? The Soviet regime was bad. The fascist regime was bad. The United States was good. Things are no longer this simple and American is no longer shining the torch of democracy from across the ocean.

March 31, 2008

Washington Not Ready to Add Nicaragua to the Axis of Evil

From my friend, the excellent Jeff Stein, Congressional Quarterly's National Security Editor:

"When Daniel Ortega unexpectedly led his left-wing party back into power in Nicaragua in early 2007, he faced a dark future — literally.

The lights were going out all over the country. Its ancient power systems leaked so much electricity that even its one creaky oil refinery, privatized by his pro-American predecessors, couldn’t make up for shortages.

Blackouts were shutting off power for as much as 12 hours a days in many towns and cities. Food spoiled. Ice melted. Children read by candlelight.

The dire situation had helped bring down Ortega’s rivals, and now it could quickly undo him and his Sandinista party.  But Ortega had an ace: Venezuela’s garrulous anti-American leader, Hugo Chavez.

They struck a deal — and what a deal it was.Chavez would supply cheap oil on easier terms than a subprime mortgage.  Not only that, the deal was made between Chavez’s state oil company and shadowy entity set up by Sandinista party officials — not, in other words, the Nicaraguan government, according to knowledgeable sources.

Ever since, the commercial entity, known by its Spanish acronym, ALBANISA, has in turn been selling cheap oil to party officials who hold the mayorships in scores of Nicaraguan towns and villages. Not only that, a chunk of the proceeds are then recycled back to party officials for local economic and social projects.   

Ortega and the Sandinistas have benefitted, big time — and so have Nicaraguans. The blackouts have ended. Fertilizer, also produced by the Venezuelan oil, is plentiful.

Yes, the cost of energy to Nicaraguan consumers has risen 18 percent, according to independent figures and Latin American news media, but that’s only half the rate of the rest of the region.

So Nicaraguans have done well by Ortega and Chavez, the Mussolini-like orator whose grandiose vision of leading a regional economic and political alliance against the United States gained a significant new piece."

Continue reading "Washington Not Ready to Add Nicaragua to the Axis of Evil" »

March 30, 2008

RIP Dith Pran...

From NYT:

"Dith Pran, a photojournalist for The New York Times whose gruesome ordeal in the killing fields of Cambodia was re-created in a 1984 movie that gave him an eminence he tenaciously used to press for his people’s rights, died in New Brunswick, N.J., on Sunday. He was 65 and lived in Woodbridge, N.J."

"A dramatic moment, both in reality and cinematically, came when Mr. Dith saved Mr. Schanberg and other Western journalists from certain execution by talking fast and persuasively to the trigger-happy soldiers who had captured them.

But despite frantic effort, Mr. Schanberg could not keep Mr. Dith from being sent to the countryside to join millions working as virtual slaves.

Mr. Schanberg returned to the United States and was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for his reporting from Cambodia. He accepted it on behalf of Mr. Dith as well.

For years there was no news of Mr. Dith, except for a false rumor that he had been fed to alligators. His brother had been. After more than four years of beatings, backbreaking labor and a diet of a tablespoon of rice a day, Mr. Dith, on Oct. 3, 1979, escaped over the Thai border. Mr. Schanberg flew to greet him."

Another Russian Victim...

The latest alleged victim  (H/T Matt) of the Putin gang is Russian-born artist, Anna Mikhalchuk:

"Police divers were searching a lake bed in Berlin yesterday for traces of a controversial Russian artist and outspoken critic of President Vladimir Putin, who disappeared from her new home in Germany's capital a week ago after saying she was going out shopping.

Anna Mikhalchuk, 52, moved to Berlin with her husband last November after angering the Kremlin and the Russian Orthodox Church with a Moscow exhibition that the authorities said was "blasphemous" and which was subsequently ransacked by nationalist Orthodox thugs."

I am assuming they are talking about the Nashi Youth Movement that Putin put together.

"Divers were searching a lake near her home in the city's Charlottenburg district and more than 80 other officers were combing the surrounding area for clues that might help explain her sudden disappearance.

Mikhalchuk, who speaks fluent English but little German, left her home on Good Friday at about 3pm and disappeared without trace. Her husband, the philosopher and author Mikhail Ryklin, 60, said she simply picked up her coat and told him she was going out to buy some food. He added: "Her disappearance remains a complete mystery. Only minutes beforehand, she had been speaking to one of her friends on the telephone and had arranged a meeting with her in Berlin for the next day."'

Now consider that people who are now citizens or legal residents of countries other than Russia are being disappeared and/or attacked and/or murdered in those countries. Among these victims there is Alexander Litvinenko, who was assassinated on British soil and Paul Joyal, who was shot on American soil. Apparently national boundaries are not prohibiting these attacks and the US seems to show no interest in this growing threat. (Yes, Condi, the Soviet threat is being reconstituted while you do nothing, the Russian expert that you are).

We all know I am a very vocal Putin critic. So, just remember that I am not remotely suicidal, won't run-away from home while on errands and shopping, and if I am shot in the groin (like Joyal), then I most certainly was not simply mugged. Just an FYI kind of thing.

March 23, 2008

Two Russian Journalists Killed on the Same Day... Same Place...

As I noted on Friday, Illyas Shurpayeva, a  Russian journalist in Dagestan was stabbed and strangled. He had noted earlier in the day that word came down that he was to be blacklisted. Now it seems that another journalist was killed, also on Friday and also in Dagestan (h/t Matt):

"Moscow (dpa) - The head of the state radio and television in the  Russian autonomous Republic of Dagestan was shot dead on Friday in   the capital Makhachkala, the Russia state prosecutor Yuri Chaika told  the Interfax news agency on Friday.

  The death of Gaji Abashilova marks the second murder of a  journalist in Russia Friday.    

Abashilova, who shot on the street in Makhachkala by assailants  who fired from a car, according to the Interfax report, which added  that Chaika would personally take over the investigation into the  murder.    

Earlier Friday, Russia state-television journalist Illyas  Shurpayev (a native of Dagestan) was found strangled with a belt and  stabbed in his burning apartment by firefighters.    

Three days before his death, the news portal Caucasian Knot  reported that Shurpayev had complained of being at the top of a  blacklist of journalists who were no longer allowed to publish for a Dagestani newspaper."

The International Federation of Journalists is demanding a full investigation. Sadly, as of 2007, Russia has been only second (to Iraq) as the most dangerous place for journalists and to this day, most of those murders have yet to be solved, including that of the most well known Russian reporter, Anna Politkovskaya.

During the Cold War, America prided itself on being the opposite of the Soviet regime and would immediately condemn the murder of a journalist and very vehemently. Under the Bush cabal, no one seems to care at the mass murder of hundreds of Russian journalists. No one is screaming bloody hell. No one is interested and likely because the press in the US is not all that free either (in comparison to Russia, yes, but not in comparison to the definition of democracy).

March 21, 2008

Another dead Russian journalist...

Looks like Russia is becoming the most dangerous place in the world for journalists. Here is another body to add to the growing pile of dead journalists in this "free" country:

"A journalist for state-run Russian television was found dead in Moscow early Friday and prosecutors have opened a murder investigation, colleagues and officials said.

Firefighters found Channel One correspondent Ilyas Shurpayev's body in his apartment with stab wounds and a belt around his neck, Channel One spokeswoman Larisa Krymova said. She said a fire was apparently set in the apartment after the attack.

The Investigative Committee, a branch of the prosecutor's office said a murder investigation was underway. It said nothing about a possible motive.

State-run Vesti-24 television cited a concierge in Shurpayev's building as saying he had called down from his apartment early Friday to ask her to let two young men in.

Shurpayev, 32, was a native of the mostly Muslim Dagestan province and had worked in Russia's violence-ridden North Caucasus, which includes Dagestan and war-scarred Chechnya. Dagestan is plagued by tension among rival groups and political factions.

Hours before his death, Shurpayev wrote in his blog that the owners of a newspaper in Dagestan banned a column he wrote and instructed its staffers not to mention his name in publications.

"Now I am a dissident!" was the title of the last entry in the Web journal under his name.

More than a dozen journalists have been slain in contract-style killings in Russia since 2000. Many journalists appear to have been targeted for beatings and killings because of their attempts to dig into allegations of corruption."

Vladimir Bukovsky asks for your help...

Update at end

##

My good friend, author and former Soviet dissident Vladimir Bukovsky is asking for your help. First, if you don't know who Mr. Bukovsky is, here is a brief bio:

" Vladimir Bukovsky is a Soviet dissident, author, and human rights activist who spent a total of twelve years in Soviet prisons, labor  camps, and forced-treatment psychiatric hospitals. As a student, Mr. Bukovsky was expelled from his Moscow school for creating an  unauthorized magazine. Subsequently he was forcibly interned in a psychiatric ward for organizing poetry meetings in the center of Moscow.

On three more occasions he was arrested and imprisoned for  organizing demonstrations defending other Soviet dissidents. After he managed to smuggle to the West documents detailing the Soviets'  political use of psychiatric institutions, he was arrested and convicted for “slander of Soviet psychiatry.” While in prison he co-authored A Manual on Psychiatry for Dissidents to help other dissidents fight psychiatric torture.

In December 1976, Bukovsky was exchanged in Zurich for Chilean communist leader Louis Corvalan. He  moved to England, where he published his bestselling  autobiography, To Build a Castle: My Life As a Dissenter. In 1983, with  Armando Valladares, he founded and was elected president of Resistance International, which fought for the freedom of political prisoners throughout the Communist bloc. In 1992, President Yeltsin’s government invited Bukovsky to serve as an expert witness at the trial  conducted to determine whether the activity of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union was unconstitutional.

The result of his testimony and research was the book Judgment in Moscow. In January 2004, with Garry Kasparov and others, he founded the Committee of 2008, an umbrella organization of the Russian democratic opposition that aims to ensure free and fair presidential elections in 2008. Bukovsky is  also the author of Soviet Hypocrisy and Western Gullibility and To Choose Freedom."

Now for his request, which I got via email today:

Our friends from St. Petersburg are asking for support. Maxim Reznik, the leader of the democratic opposition in the city, was arrested about three weeks ago on fabricated charges. People campaigning in defence of him suffer repression, too. This is certainly a start of a major attack by the regime against the dissidents, so it must be countered the sooner the better.
On Sunday 30 March I will picket the Russian Embassy in London with the poster saying 'Freedom to Maxim Reznik! Freedom to political prisoners!'.
I ask you to do the same in your own cities on the same date. I need it to happen in as many countries as possible. Do mobilise media to report that. Do let me know if you are going to support me, to give us time to help you with the media if we can.
It is very important to have all of us doing that simultaneously, that is, on the 30th of March. I believe such an international demonstration is the only way to force the Russian regime stop that chain of repression.

I think we might want to add Don Siegelman, Paul Minor, Jose Padilla, and countless others to our signs. Regardless of what other names you add, when Mr. Bukovsky asks for our help, we have to give it.

##

Update:

The timing is interesting. Reznik has now been released. Either the Kremlinites were a bit worried that Bukovsky would draw attention to them or this was one hell of a coincidence.  I still think we should all hold up signs with our political prisoners listed, be they in Russia, in the US, or anywhere else. Imagine if we all did it at once, the world over. It would be a vision, would it not?

March 03, 2008

Ah, the Soviet Elections...

Single party rule, again:

"Riot police in Moscow arrested dozens of activists Monday in a chaotic protest against a presidential election the opposition is characterizing as a stage-managed farce. VOA's Peter Fedynsky has this report from the Russian capital.

It was a small demonstration with a huge police presence in Moscow's Turgenev Square. There was no stage and if there were to be any public speakers, they were all arrested. Police arrested individuals they reportedly identified from photos of previous demonstrations.

As orders crackled over walkie-talkies, helmeted riot police picked off activists by ones and twos, some in the nearby metro station, a few in a local McDonalds, more behind the subway stop and others in front it. Police drove away two busloads of detainees.

Then the focus of the demonstration moved to another part of the square, where it turned into anarchy.

Activists, journalists, and police stumbled, surged, twisted and turned past and through one another, each trying to do their job - to inform, to report … to arrest. The only ones moving in a straight line were the police, who pushed in aggressive fashion through crowds of cameramen and journalists to seize the activist being interviewed in the middle."

Activists being interviewed by reporters require a massive police response? Ironically this suppression of freedom too place at Turgenev (the poet) Square. Of course my favorite part of this description is as follows:

"Alexander Khatov of the Other Russia Coalition says the cheating involves more than the presidency. He says popular election of judges and governors was repealed, and authorities arbitrarily set voter turnout numbers, which means they can elect themselves. He says authorities show up themselves, vote for themselves and fill in the figure they need to declare themselves winners.

Many regions of Russia have voter turnouts exceeding 90 percent, a suspiciously high figure that is typically associated with falsified elections in authoritarian states. Dmitri Medvedev won the election with more than 70 percent of the vote. Several well-known Russian politicians who could have questioned Kremlin policies were disqualified on technical grounds."

Wow, this sounds so very American, except we don't call it "cheating" or even stacking the odds or voter caging or anything yucky here. No, we call the exit polls into question, when the percentage points don't match. Should that fail, we now also argue that math is not a science and therefor only mildly accurate in measuring voter turn out. As for electing popular judges, we simply have them installed on recess appointments. And we take care of the old "party" problem by having the districts redrawn so that people can stay in power for ever and ever.  Soviet America, and Russian democracy, a mirror reflecting a mirror.

February 07, 2008

The Tesseract Archipelago...

Cross-Posted at Huffington Post

---I AM ANGRY---

The Bush administration has indeed accomplished a mission, intended or not, to recreate the United States into a super-power demon, a super-power monster, a super-power consuming itself and everything around it.  A country that has secret prisons within secret prisons built on an island belonging to the very type of government we claim to be the opposite of is not a democracy.

For the commie fearing right-wingers, their collective  silence about US funding of communist Cuba through a business arrangement in which they give us land to house our concentration camps on  is astounding.  It is, however, no surprise that nationalists see human rights abuses as a necessary fall-out of war.  After all, Christian extremists, like their Muslim counterparts see war as a tool of God, and they see God in a single man giving them orders, not in anything divine:

'"You will go with General Boykin and Green Beret instructors to places where no civilians and few soldiers ever go," the Rev. Bobby Welch told pastors in a letter inviting them to attend the two-day Super FAITH Force Multiplier session. "We must find a group of men who are warriors of FAITH, pastors who have the guts to lead this nation to Christ and revival!" Welch, a friend of Boykin's, told the invitees they would see Boykin's headquarters, a demonstration of "today's war-fighting weapons" and how "Special Forces attack the enemy inside buildings (live fire/real bullets)" as well as hear a speech and get "informal time" with Boykin."

Or as Boykin - one of the architects of the Abu Ghraib concentration camp model, which was based on the Gitmo model -  once said about George W. Bush:

"Why is this man in the White House? The majority of Americans did not vote for him. Why is he there? And I tell you this morning that he's in the White House because God put him there for a time such as this." (NYT, 10-17-2003)

Never mind that one has to first have a soul in order to have a conscience through which something like real faith can be processed. Nationalists, religious or otherwise, don't have a soul. They have a flag and some other trinkets and they have bitter hate mixed with mortal fear of something out in the ether. Boykin has his uniform, his cross, and his torture chamber to help him justify the horrors of his actions as somehow all-American and Christian. 

That is all Boykin has to measure his love of country by,  his love of humanity by, if such obscene nationalism and need for supremacy can ever be measured by something as clean and selfless as love.

---WHY AM I ANGRY?---

Because I woke up to this:

"Somewhere amid the cactus-studded hills on this sprawling Navy base, separate from the cells where hundreds of men suspected of links to al-Qaida and the Taliban have been locked up for years, is a place even more closely guarded — a jailhouse so protected that its very location is top secret.

For the first time, the top commander of detention operations at Guantanamo has confirmed the existence of the mysterious Camp 7. In an interview with The Associated Press, Rear Adm. Mark Buzby also provided a few details about the maximum-security lockup.

Guantanamo commanders said Camp 7 is for key alleged al-Qaida members, who must be kept apart from other prisoners to prevent them from retaliating against long-term detainees who have talked to interrogators. They also want the location kept secret for fear of terrorist attack."

---YOU SEE WHY I AM ANGRY?---

A concentration camp within a concentration camp that we pay a Communist nation to host. Sounds so simple, does it not?  The problem is that there were never that many al Qaeda members to justify Gitmo's larger prison to begin with.

At their peak, before 9/11, al Qaeda numbered under 200.  So just who is being hosted at Camp 7 and why is it so secret that no one knows - until now - that it even existed? Osama bin Laden, if I recall is vacationing in Pakistan, along with his major commanders. They too have guns and God, always a potent mixture.  The Taliban's most dangerous leaders are mostly back in Afghanistan and some are along with bin Laden on vacation in Pakistan, also in possession of guns, justified by their God.

We have secret prisons all over the world, where secret "al Qaeda" and secret "Taliban" prisoners are being held. We have the larger camps at Gitmo too, where "al Qaeda" and "Taliban" secret prisoners are secretly being held. So I ask again, just who the hell - and how many - prisoners are being held at Camp 7? More importantly, what kind of prisoners would a man like Boykin select? That, my friends, is what scares me the most.

I know, the right-wing nationalists will argue something about security and something about 9/11, again to justify war on behalf of God or something of the sort.  Nationalists always argue for an unseen, unheard, unreal threat existing somewhere in the shadows. Come to think of it, an unseen, unheard, unreal threat existing in the shadows sounds like their description of God. Interesting, is it not, that  religious nationalists such as these define God the same way they define their enemy? And what of their followers, the lower rungs of the symbol-loving faithful?

You just need to look through the annals of history if you want examples of how the mindless drone swallows whole the lie of a threat and defends to the death that lie no matter all the evidence to the contrary.

Aside from the security propaganda and its flag-waving boot-marchers, however, I want a legitimate explanation as to why we need this many camps, this many secret camps within camps, and just who the hell is being held there in secret and why in secret.  I demand this as a US citizen. Because if we have people secretly boxed within secret boxes, which house even more secret boxes filled with even more secret people, then we cannot continue calling ourselves a democracy.

---WHAT ELSE IS THERE TO SAY?---

Perhaps we can call ourselves a secret democracy, encased in a tesseract and planted on an island owned by a declared enemy, but that would be too long a description when there is a far shorter and more direct way to say what we are becoming: a fascist nation.

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