Sunday, August 31, 2008

Freedom of the Press Russian Style

Philip P Pan, "Russian Activist Shot Dead By Police," washingtonpost.com (Sept. 1, 2008):
A leading opposition figure in Russia's volatile Ingushetia province was shot and killed Sunday after being detained by police, authorities said. His colleagues issued a call for protests in response, and human rights groups demanded an investigation.



Magomed Yevloyev, a businessman and the owner of a Web site that angered Kremlin-backed local leaders with its coverage of official corruption and police abuse, suffered a gunshot wound to his head while in a police car taking him to a station for interrogation, a spokesman for the Russian prosecutor's office told the Interfax news agency.





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258,000 houses destroyed by earthquake?

It appears that another terrible tragedy has taken place in Sichuan Province in the People's Republic of China. An earthquake has leveled 258,000 houses. So AP reports that Xinhua News Agency reported today.

But how did the Chinese news agency manage to come up with this large number just two days after the earthquake? Is there a chance it might be a bit high? A bit low? A bit too precise?




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Thursday, August 28, 2008

Personality Cult

The country worries about Hillary Clinton's psyche. Or some of the country does. And HR Clinton seems to encourage us to worry about her psyche.



In some countries the public worries about the psyche of the Great Man. Now are to worry about the psyche of the Great Woman?



Disgusting. We've got more important things to worry about.




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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

What about MY Catharsis?

The NYTimes reports that "Mrs. Clinton is in the midst of a 'catharsis.'"

Well, I'm in a midst of a catharsis too. So why am I not getting press and media attention? Darned unfair, I say.



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Thursday, August 21, 2008

Soviet Man Spoke Russian

Not much has changed. I see that many people even in the American media are wont to refer to Ossetians and Abkhazians as "Russians." Of course, the Abkhaz and the Ossetians are not ethnic Russians. Stalin tended to deport people in order to do away with nationalist sentiments. Today Russia just reclassifies people; it gives them passports and calls them "Russians." (And if that doesn't work, the Russians like to obliterate the towns and the countryside that the offending populations inhabit. See, e.g., Grozny, Chechnya. Afterwards a democratic referendum is held [the dead do not have a vote] and peace is proclaimed.)


The Europeans have the right approach: let Czechoslavakia break into two countries and then invite both to join a truly transnational union. Of course, even the EU is not fully consistent. Witness its member states' treatment of, say, Basque nationalist sentiments. 



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Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Sixth Circle of Hades

As punishment for the attack on Georgia, Russia will be condemned, though not to the most nether regions of Hades, but at least to the near-nether regions:


...NATO foreign ministers were discussing possibly scaling back high-level meetings and military cooperation with Russia if it does not abandon crucial positions across Georgia.


Paul Ames, "NATO mulls closer ties with Georgia" (AP), The Guardian online

I imagine Putin will lose many sleepless nights over this terrible ignominy. No contact with the League of Nations! ... er ... NATO. How awful.




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What Is NATO Worth?

Never mind Georgia or Ukraine. Would NATO defend Poland or the Baltic states -- Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania -- against a Russian military attack?

There is good reason to wonder.

The only real protection against Russian military aggression may be to live in the U.S.A. -- or in another country with its own "nuclear shield" -- or in a country such as Afghanistan. (China, for many reasons, is almost surely immune to Russian military aggression.)

Irredentism, it seems, is an ever-recurring human disease.

Is the life expectancy of a Russian male at birth still approximately 57 years? Ah, Russian imperial glory. Well, at least Russia still leads Zimbabwe in this respect. Or so one hopes.

But there is a bright lining to every dark cloud: the reconquest of Georgia would provide more real estate for dachas for Russian apparatchiks -- and, who knows?, it might lead to the birth of a new (Georgian? non-Georgian?) Stalin.




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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

The KGB in the 21st Century

What is the meaning of the KGB in the 21st century?



The KGB is crude, dirty, and violent.



Vladimir Putin was a KGB agent.



Perhaps Putin still is a KGB agent -- at least in spirit. But, if so, this KGB man wraps himself in religion.



The Russian state is Putin's god.

God (the real one) help us all!



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