- Russia’s Foreign Ministry Official Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova following the Kiev regime’s terrorist attacks on Russia’s Kherson Region
On December 30, the criminal Kiev regime, aided and abetted by its NATO handlers, perpetrated an atrocious attack on the Central District Hospital in Alyoshki, Kherson Region, Russian Federation, using an unmanned aerial vehicle to penetrate the Chief Physician’s office. As a result of this tragedy, Deputy Chief Physician for Medical Affairs Vasily Borisov was killed, and the hospital’s Chief Physician Vladimir Kharlan sustained severe shrapnel wounds.
We strongly condemn this new cynical and brutal crime committed by the Kiev regime, once again exposing its inhumane Nazi nature.
The shelling of communities in the Russian regions, the ruthless and indiscriminate murders of civilians – journalists, doctors, and representatives of other civilian professions – are clearly the last struggles of Zelensky’s neo-Nazi regime, mired in terrorism, lawlessness, corruption and cynicism, which is striving, in its impotent anger, to please its Western puppeteers by killing as many Russian people as possible.
- Larry C. Johnson writes "The death of former President Jimmy Carter at the age of 100, does not mark the end of an era. Actually, his death is an exclamation point for the disastrous US foreign policy of the last 45 years, especially with respect to the threat from Islamic extremism and the troubled relations with Russia. Jimmy Carter’s reign set the stage for much of the current unrest and turmoil in west Asia and Ukraine. While it is true that Mr. Carter worked diligently after leaving Washington, DC to burnish his image as a humanitarian, his policies towards Russia and Iran became festering sores on the American political body that linger, still suppurating, until today."
- My own take on Jimmy Carter is: "Soon after getting out of the Air Force in 1974 and attending a community college in Orlando, Florida, then Gov. Jimmy Carter came to speak at my school. I was impressed. I helped a bit on his campaign for prez. What sold me on him? His statement 'The arms race is a disgrace to the human race'. Once inside the White House he built the Trident nuclear submarine base in St. Marys, Georgia and I gave up on him. Years later I read a book that told the story how David Rockefeller's Trilateral Commission director Zbigniew Brzezinski was told to go find a 'new fresh face' to run for prez in order to get the nation over the 'Vietnam syndrome' (wanting no more wars). So they built the campaign around the 'peanut farmer from rural Georgia' and off they went to the races. During his last two years in office Carter dramatically cut social spending and moved the money into the Pentagon. I know this because at that time I was working on anti-poverty programs in Orlando and witnessed these cuts. It was then I moved full time into organizing against US militarism. No one gets to be prez without being fully under control of the deep state - period."
2 comments:
"Jimmy Carter Was No Saint" is my post about Carter's legacy that got much more feedback than usual. One respondent alone pushed back on my vilifying their hero & unironically suggested that that reading Heather Cox Richardson would straighten me out. Everyone else who responded said things like, What about Central America? What about East Timor? What about the Gangjeong Massacre?
Link to my post: https://went2thebridge.substack.com/p/jimmy-carter-was-no-saint
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