Sorosites move against Putin

Started by rmstock, January 21, 2016, 01:07:27 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

rmstock

   [------] Kodorkovsky's neocon [1] web magazine partners with Soros's Radio Free Europe/Liberty
   to slam Russia.  Khodorkovsky is the Russian tax cheat and corporate swindler freed by Putin
   with the agreement that the dual Russian-Israeli cockroach would not try to overthrow the
   Russian government. Moral of the story: never trust one of these vermin. [-----] The launch of
   this propaganda duet comes just as this codswallop came out of some British judge's arsehole:
   Putin "probably approved" a Russian intelligence operation to murder ex-KGB agent Alexander 
   Litvinenko with radioactive polonium-210, a British inquiry into the 2006 killing has concluded
   [2]. Yes, British inquiries are so "conclusive" -- just like the official "inquiries" into the
   murder of Dr. David Kelly, buggering of children by the royals and top government ministers,
   and the "dodgy dossier" from Number 10. [-----] Sorosites pull midnight coup in Moldova [3].
   Pro-EU president sworn in without parliamentary support. It's only a democracy when the old
   many-tentacled octopus Soros says it is. [-----] After invasion of over a million, mostly
   problematic refugees, German Interior Minister extends border controls indefinitely [4]. And he
   and Merkel remain in office after this major failure?  [------] Swedish police classify reports
   on migrant crimes [5]. Sweden protecting the rights of the criminals. [-----] Denmark's
   nightclubs require patrons speak Danish, English, or German [6]. Soros-funded groups cry
   "discrimination," a typical dog whistle in Europe now. 
   [1] American state media partners with neocon smear blog: RFE/RL falls
       from the moral high ground
      Published time: 20 Jan, 2016 15:48Edited time: 20 Jan, 2016 16:45
      https://www.rt.com/op-edge/329578-rfe-khodorkovsky-russia-usa-interpreter/
   [2] Alexander Litvinenko: Vladimir Putin 'probably approved' operation to
       kill Russian ex-spy, UK inquiry finds
      Updated about 2 hours ago [Thu Jan 21 15:27:22 CET 2016]
      http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-01-21/alexander-litvinenko-russia-spy-putin-inquiry/7106006
   [3] Thousands protest in Moldova after PM hastily sworn in at midnight
      Industries | Thu Jan 21, 2016 8:13am EST
      CHISINAU | By Alexander Tanas
      http://www.reuters.com/article/moldova-politics-idUSL8N1552K7
   [4] Germany to extend border controls indefinitely: interior minister
      Date 21.01.2016  - Refugees
      http://www.dw.com/en/germany-to-extend-border-controls-indefinitely-interior-minister
   [5] Swedish Police Classify Info About Refugee Violence
      Europe 11:49 21.01.2016
      http://sputniknews.com/europe/20160121/1033472644/sweden-police-migrants.html
   [6] Danish nightclubs demand guests have to speak Danish, English or German
      to be allowed in after 'foreign men in groups' attack female revellers
      By Sara Malm for MailOnline
      Published: 17:23 GMT, 18 January 2016 | Updated: 19:51 GMT, 18 January 2016
      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3405167/Danish-nightclubs-demand-guests-speak-Danish-English-German


``I hope that the fair, and, I may say certain prospects of success will not induce us to relax.''
-- Lieutenant General George Washington, commander-in-chief to
   Major General Israel Putnam,
   Head-Quarters, Valley Forge, 5 May, 1778

rmstock


UK Column News 21st January 2016
by bazilian0 , Published on Jan 21, 2016
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9CEgnkE9-64

``I hope that the fair, and, I may say certain prospects of success will not induce us to relax.''
-- Lieutenant General George Washington, commander-in-chief to
   Major General Israel Putnam,
   Head-Quarters, Valley Forge, 5 May, 1778

rmstock

#2
Litvinenko's Brother: 'Blaming Putin for murder is ridiculous – Britain had more reason to kill him'
January 24, 2016 By 21wire 12 Comments
http://21stcenturywire.com/2016/01/24/litvinenkos-brother-blaming-putin-for-murder-is-ridiculous-britain-had-more-reason-to-kill-him/

  "21st Century Wire says...

   This week's British 'inquiry' into the death of Alexander Litvinenko
   concluded that the Kremiln "probably, might have" ordered or "approved"
   the murder of the Russian defector turned British spy. Despite claims
   by certain UK Parliamentarians, their findings seem to be anything but
   conclusive...

   
   Despite presenting no real evidence to back the claim, the inquiry led
   by British judge Robert Owen thought it was sufficient enough to blame
   the spy's death on Russian president Vladimir Putin because Litvinenko
   was a critic of Putin, with the entire case hinging on an obscure
   internet article, allegedly published in 2005 by Litvinenko on a little
   known website called Chechen Press, a copy of which can be viewed here
   on the blog Information Liberation.
   
   
   (Image Source: Sputnik)
   
   Then, in an alarmingly coordinated fashion, Britain's The Independent
   newspaper, owned by Alexander Yevgenievich Lebedev, a UK-based
   anti-Putin Russian billionaire led the next leg of the PR campaign,
   painting a spurious picture of Putin as paedophile, echoing the Owen
   Inquiry's claim that it was Litvinenko's 2005 online article which
   prompted the murder of the Russian defector.
   
   If Litvinenko's 2005 internet article was the central piece of
   'evidence' in the Owen Inquiry, and if this was so damning, with such
   profound international implications – then why was it buried until now?
   Could this Inquiry be more geopolitically motivated, than justice
   motivated? The answer to that question should be self-evident when
   considering the west vs east international crises currently unfolding
   in places like the Ukraine, Crimea, Syria and Turkey.
   
   Maksim Litvinenko, the brother of deceased Aleksandr Litvinenko,
   certainly believes this controversy is politically motivated (see full
   report below).
   
   If the British political establishment can place so much weight on an
   obscure blog posting in order to determine a guilty verdict, then why
   did they ignore the late 1990's edition of Scallywag Magazine which
   contained an explosive expose naming a long list of Westminster
   politicians and luminaries involved in the very real VIP child abuse
   rings being  run out of London's Dolphin Square and Elms Guest House,
   and also from the Bryn Alyn Boys Home in Wrexham, Wales. Based on what
   we know so far about some of these scandals
, Scallywag's investigation
   seemed to be fairly close to the mark, and yet, like so many similar
   reports – it was, and to a large degree, still remains buried by the
   British political Establishment – and with no sign of any call for a
   much-needed, high-profile Public Inquiry.
   
   This latest leg of Litvinenko drama has prompted a wave of tweets with
   the hashtag #PutinProbablyApproved...
   
   https://twitter.com/JabuKhuluse/status/691168867872292864
   
   RT
   .
  The brother of Aleksandr Litvinenko says the UK government had more
   motivation to kill him than Russia did, despite a British public
   inquiry which concluded that President Putin "probably" approved the
   assassination.

   
   Maksim Litvinenko, Aleksandr's younger brother who lives in Rimini,
   Italy, responded to the Thursday report by saying it was "ridiculous"
   to blame the Kremlin for the murder of his brother, stating that he
   believes British security services had more of a motive to carry out
   the assassination.
   
   "My father and I are sure that the Russian authorities are not
   involved. It's all a set-up to put pressure on the Russian government,"

   Litvinenko told the Mirror, adding that such reasoning is the only
   explanation as to why the inquiry was launched 10 years after his
   brother's death.
   
   He called the British report a "smear" on Putin, and stressed that
   rumors claiming his brother was an enemy of the state are false. He
   added that Aleksandr had planned to return to Russia, and had even told
   friends about the move.
   
   https://twitter.com/RT_com/status/690134218031153152
   
   Litvinenko went on to downplay his brother's alleged role as a spy,
   working for either Russia or MI6, adding that the Western media is to
   blame for such characterization.
   
   "The Russians had no reason to want Alexander dead," he said. "My
   brother was not a spy, he was more like a policeman...he was in the FSB
   [Russian Federal Security Service] but he worked against organized
   crime, murders, arms trafficking, stuff like that."

   
   Litvinenko was murdered in London in 2006, when assassins allegedly
   slipped radioactive polonium 21 into his cup of tea at a hotel. But his
   brother Maksim cast doubt on whether that was actually the poison used,
   saying he believes it could have been planted to frame the Russians.
   
   "I believe he could have been killed by another poison, maybe thallium,
   which killed him slowly, and the polonium was planted afterwards,"
he
   said. He added that requests to have his brother's body exhumed, in
   order to verify the presence of polonium, have been ignored by Britain.
   
   "Now after 10 years any trace [of polonium] would have disappeared
   anyway, so we will never know,"
he said, adding that British
   authorities had not collaborated with Russian investigators on the case.
   
   "This case became a big PR campaign against the Russian government and
   its president in particular,"
Maksim Litvinenko told RT in an interview
   in 2014. "The West is pressuring Russia very hard now. The MH-17 crash,
   Crimea, the war in Ukraine, sanctions against Moscow and now this
   inquiry – I'm not buying that this is a coincidence."

   
   When asked why Aleksandr Litvinenko's widow Marina continues to
   maintain that the Kremlin is responsible for the murder, he said: "She
   lives in London, to survive she has to play the game and take this
   point of view. She can't say anything else."

   
   (...) Back in 2012, Litvinenko's father backtracked on his claims that
   Vladimir Putin was responsible for his son's death, and asked the
   Russian president for forgiveness. Walter Litvinenko told RT that his
   anger had made him say what the Western media wanted to hear...
   
   Continue this story at RT
   
   READ MORE RUSSIA NEWS AT: 21st Century Wire Russia Files "

Episode #119: 'You Know the Drill' with guests Robert Singer and Jay Dyer

``I hope that the fair, and, I may say certain prospects of success will not induce us to relax.''
-- Lieutenant General George Washington, commander-in-chief to
   Major General Israel Putnam,
   Head-Quarters, Valley Forge, 5 May, 1778

rmstock

It looks like the disqus commenting system is displaying comments on a
need to know basis. In my case the disqus engine strangely enough
deletes over 5000 comments from displaying properly.


Who are these Disqus lads actually and
why does archive.org has not stored a single comment from Disqus ?


In the first few second it displays the actual number of made comments :



only 5 seconds later , after all advertisements are loaded, we are left with a total of
14 comments made [sic] since 2012 :


``I hope that the fair, and, I may say certain prospects of success will not induce us to relax.''
-- Lieutenant General George Washington, commander-in-chief to
   Major General Israel Putnam,
   Head-Quarters, Valley Forge, 5 May, 1778