"her sins have massed together clear up to heaven"

by proplog2 11 Replies latest jw friends

  • proplog2
    proplog2

    New Truth:

    I am responding AS IF you are being serious.

    Iraq didn't have hegemony over the kings of the earth when Bush invaded.

  • proplog2
    proplog2

    Another news item illustrating how the USA is "pushing" the King of the North.

    Izvestia
    April 19, 2007
    WEAKENING AND CONTAINING
    American policy and intentions toward Russia
    Author: Vyacheslav Nikonov, president of the Politika Foundation
    [After the collapse of the USSR, there were two competing concepts
    in the United States regarding interaction with Russia. The first
    concept entailed engagement. The second concept assumed that
    Russia was a hopeless case. Now the second concept is becoming
    dominant.]

    The wise Chinese have a definition to describe any kind of
    reality. Of late, the policy of the West (mostly the United
    States) toward Russia has been defined as a "weakening and
    containing" strategy.
    After the collapse of the USSR, there were two competing
    concepts in the United States regarding interaction with Russia.
    The first concept entailed engagement - drawing Russia into the
    global system by developing pragmatic cooperation based on areas
    where the USA and Russia have common interests. The second concept
    assumed that Russia was a hopeless case, a despotic and
    imperialist power, and proposed to finish it off by continuing
    Cold War policies and across-the-board confrontation. Both these
    concepts, shifting in and out of the foreground by turn, came
    through in American policy during the Yeltsin era and after Putin
    took office, regardless of what was happening in Russia.
    Engagement was dominant after September 11, 2001. But now the
    second concept is becoming dominant - confirming that the Chinese
    conclusion is correct.
    This year alone, Washington has produced a number of
    decisions, laws, and official statements that demonstratively
    contradict Russia's vital interests or aim to elicit a predictable
    negative reaction from Russia. The year opened with Russia being
    accused of pursuing an energy imperialism policy with regard to
    Belarus in the transition to free-market price formation -
    although the West had earlier insisted on higher energy prices for
    Minsk. US Defense Secretary Robert Gates argued for a defense
    spending increase on the grounds of unpredictable situations in
    China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea; in effect, we were included
    in the "axis of evil" for the first time. And the decision to
    deploy American national missile defense elements in Poland and
    the Czech Republic was certainly anti-Russian. Then the US
    Congress passed an act, already signed into law by President Bush,
    in support of NATO membership for Ukraine and Georgia - also
    allocating American tax-payers' money for that purpose. Few are
    deterred by the fact that two-thirds of Ukrainians, along with the
    Ukrainian parliament, don't want to join NATO; after all,
    Washington knows best. And now a group of influential lawmakers,
    headed by presidential contender Hillary Clinton, is proposing to
    introduce a Cold War Service Medal.
    Against this backdrop, the Russia section of the US State
    Department's annual report on the state of democracy around the
    world also drew extra attention. It didn't contain anything new;
    similar statements were made in reports five or ten years ago. The
    harsh judgements aren't as noteworthy as the frank disclosure of
    America's action plan in Russia - with its declaration of direct
    intervention in the political and electoral process, which is
    obviously inconsistent with Russian law. Like any other country,
    Russia forbids foreign involvement in elections. The US State
    Department report talks of programs and direct funding for Russian
    non-governmental organizations; what's more, any attempt to
    counteract those programs will be portrayed as "stifling
    democracy," by definition.
    Among the most obvious evidence for the "weakening and
    containing" policy is the West's total support and propaganda
    coverage for the Dissenter March protests. For several days,
    reports about the Russian fringe opposition's latest rallies took
    precedence in the Western media, ahead of more important stories
    like terrorist bombings claiming dozens of lives in Iraq, a
    demonstration by 200,000 people in Turkey, and so on. In this
    case, it's not a matter of "supporting democracy." After all, most
    of the demonstrators at Dissenter March events in Moscow and St.
    Petersburg are from the National Bolshevik Party: overt neo-Nazis
    who want nothing to do with any kind of democracy, but do want to
    fight the authorities, using violent methods and not stopping
    short of direct law-breaking. That is why about 150 people headed
    by Kasparov the chess-player - people who preferred to block
    traffic by marching in a non-permitted area rather than rally in a
    permitted area - were arrested and fined 1,000 rubles each.
    Current events are strongly reminiscent of the Soviet era,
    when our country's press focused all its attention on the
    activities of communist movements in the West: their marches,
    their meetings, and the harassment they faced. So our citizens got
    the impression that those communist movements were very powerful,
    and that there was a lack of freedom in the West. Clearly, the
    Dissenters in Russia today are no more numerous or popular than
    the American Communist Party was several decades ago. Yet the
    Other Russia coalition's conference in mid-2006 was attended by
    two US deputy secretaries of state and several Western
    ambassadors. When the West gives such open backing to an
    organization with a strong neo-Nazi component, almost zero voter
    support, and an inclination to use force outside the boundaries of
    the law, it becomes obvious that the West has really decided to
    sort us out.
    Until now, there may have been some doubts about attempts to
    stage an Orange revolution scenario in Russia during the upcoming
    elections; but I, for one, no longer doubt this at all. Attempts
    at engagement with Russia have been abandoned, and regime change
    preparations are under way. How realistic is this threat?
    The likelihood of an Orange revolution actually happening in
    Russia seems minimal. The preconditions simply aren't there. Putin
    isn't Kuchma: he is popular, strong, and doesn't suffer from a
    shortage of political will. And Kasparov is no Yushchenko. In
    fact, none of the Dissenters are even one-twentieth as popular as
    Yushchenko was in 2004. If an Orange crowd demonstrates in the
    streets of Russian cities, it will always be the smallest - far
    smaller than even the communist crowd or the nationalist crowd,
    let alone the pro-Kremlin White-Blue-Red crowd. Last weekend's
    demonstrations made that clear.
    And Washington's overt support for the Dissenters isn't
    really helping them - it's more like the kiss of death, given the
    low popularity of the United States in international public
    opinion and among Russian voters.
    There won't be a revolution, but destabilization attempts
    will continue, and acts of provocation will grow (as Boris
    Berezovsky has promised), while Russia's image will be attacked in
    the global media networks. We have to be ready for that - and the
    Russian authorities need to grow a thicker skin, in order to avoid
    externally-imposed unlawful regime change that would doom Russia
    to weakness and disintegration.
    The only point I really don't understand here is why the
    United States has taken it into its head to make an enemy of
    Russia. After all, Russian citizens won't appreciate (to put it
    mildly) such crude, awkward, and obviously hopeless attempts to
    "bring happiness" to Russia.
    The Russian economy has never been in better shape. Russian
    citizens have never been so upbeat, ever since opinion polling
    began in our country. Over the past year, for the first time,
    polls have indicated that over half of our citizens think that
    Russia is moving in the right direction. But that appears to be
    precisely what displeases so many.


    See what's free at AOL.com.

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