Posted on 02/24/2024 5:59:01 AM PST by SpeedyInTexas
Balitsky faces serious problems. He insulted the residents of the Kursk region and “chatted all sorts of things” about Putin
Our sources in the entourage of Alexander Khinshtein believe that the governor of the Zaporozhye region, Yevgeny Balitsky, should be dismissed for his words about the residents of the Kursk region who did not defend their region. “Oleksandr Yevseevich will ask the president to punish Balitsky, to replace him in office. You can't insult the residents of the long-suffering region like that. Also, Balitsky needs to be checked for cooperation with Ukraine and Western special services,” said a source close to the Kursk governor.
Another source said that Balitsky insulted Vladimir Putin personally. “We heard rumors that the head of the Zaporozhye region, after the enemy's invasion of the Kursk region, chattered all sorts of things in personal conversations - that it was, they say, Vladimir Vladimirovich who could not protect the region. We were not up to it then, they did not focus on such information. And now let's check the hostile chatter about the president. And Balytskyi’s problems may not be limited to resignation,” he said. The Kremlin promised us that they would consider the issue of Balytskyi and decide what to do with him. And do we need any serious decisions about it at all?
At the same time, the situation of the Zaporozhye governor is worsened by the fact that this is not the first scandal in which he has fallen recently. It is worth recalling, for example, his conflict with the head of the CEC, Ella Pamfilova. After him, Moscow for the first time seriously thought about the resignation of Balitsky and the fact that he needed to be “punished so that he would remember it for a long time.”
https://t.me/kremlin_secrets/6351
Alexander Yevseyevich Khinshtein is the governor of Kursk Oblast since September 2025.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Khinshtein
The clock keeps ticking for P.
Economic pressure on Russia is extremely important. For the first time since the mid-1990s, the Russian economy could shrink for two consecutive years, with inflation surging to a ten-year high, forcing households to drastically cut consumption and businesses to slash investment.
These projections are part of the Central Bank's “risk scenario” for economic development, which assumes oil prices falling to $30-35 per barrel and tightening Western sanctions.
https://bsky.app/profile/antongerashchenko.bsky.social/post/3m4cuhycbck2l
Are your “freezing nights” set at centigrade or farenhite? Does FR, or this thread have a policy on which to use?
Please explain:
PIF; ftrpilot; brojoek; marcusmaximus have all left the Thread, leaving you, Granny Glee and the Foreigner as the only regular posters.
What the hell happened?
AdmSmith is posting his anti-Trump, LEFT-WING crap here again!
Numbers are ticking back up.
Gone are the days of inflated GDP, and the reality has sunk in that pitin is destroying Russia by his ego driven war.
Being generous and granting pitin launched his war based on faulty intelligence given to him in 2022, the reality since then and especially over the last few months, any sane man would stop and cut his losses.
The issue for pitin has become one of his own survival. He can’t stop or he will cease to exist, but if he continues and Russia continues to devolve into a third world nation he will also cease to exist.
How are things in The Ghetto this morning?
Is bobo and the Talkin’ Army still trying to gas the Russherns to death by Next Tuesday?
Invited Mr. President to come to Ukraine to continue our dialogue and discuss all the key prospects for the development of relations between our countries.
I have just spent my usual hour+ daily review of new info at this thread. I have read your daily comment from the valuable ISW linked site with interest, but also found interesting info in the very,very long comment just before yours. Often these kinds of postings are just annoying, but some are useful and having read some have been surprised to find some truthful and informative elements. I read the first and last paragraphs plus one in the middle, and they seemed true based on my memories of the circa 1990 period. I still have some of the front pages and articles from then, including the view of Russia’s parliament after Yeltsin fired on it.
I was especially made thoughtful by this concluding observation, “...these political openings exacerbated systemic instability, as perestroika’s partial market experiments without dismantling central planning led to supply disruptions and hyperinflation, contributing to a 20% gross national product decline across Soviet republics from 1989 to 1991.[72][100]” First of all these terminal numbers indicate a source, NOT identified for further study. Secondly I thought about Putin’s dilemma of how to get off the Tiger without getting eaten. The author of perestroika survived to die of old age, but he did not order close to 1/2 million Russian men to a useless death, plus more than that number to permanent injury, many of which are often visible to all.
It seems a very important cause for failure was the partial market experiment and the continued central planning. This directly put into conflict the wish for freedom of action and autonomy and the habit of govt. control. Of course any govt. must be concerned for having enough important goods available for the population. While the US Dept, of Agriculture supplies much important information, it does not directly control much of what is grown or not planted. Our ELECTED representatives vote for those plan applied by govt. Other important guides to individual plans and choices are privately printed material and public media like early morning agriculture programs. Our commodities portion of the stock market is a useful guide to producers. By developing alternate sources of information to farmers and other producers over time and simultaneously gradually reducing the central planning component, Russia might have ended up very different today. Instead they had hyperinflation and a 5% drop in the average lifespan of men (vodka?). In the case of an important food like milk, US farmers are supported by govt. supply of the commodity to schools if I remember correctly. The Cossacks of Ukraine had a semi-democratic system. The elected Hetman was responsible for assigning agricultural land each year. If a farm was doing badly it might be redistributed to a farmer who could do a better job. He could be voted out of office so long as the group was not in the middle of a war. [Probably the reason Ukraine does not have a Presidential election by law] although the current one has already expired.
I see that today’s daily and weekly reports on overall losses and upper level personnel losses show more military casualties and deaths of officers. Panic decisions made by commanders who fear for their careers and lives as Putin becomes more desperate? Certainly reports of deliberate murder of Russians who try to surrender by their own officer’s orders is telling!
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