Posted on 02/01/2022 12:15:33 AM PST by weston
I won’t be able to go to sleep after looking at that poor dog. Thanks. /s
Is that FJB’s dog?
These are my Jumpin’ fer Joy”/Get Stuff From High Shelves boots.
Thank you, sissyjane!
💕
Trump Fundraiser Guilfoyle Halts Interview With Jan. 6 Panel
(Bloomberg) — The legal team for Kimberly Guilfoyle, a Trump campaign fundraiser, brought an abrupt halt to her interview Friday with the House Committee investigating last year’s riot at the U.S. Capitol, saying panel members were leaking details.
“Ms. Guilfoyle, under threat of subpoena, agreed to meet exclusively with counsel for the Select Committee in a good faith effort to provide true and relevant evidence,” lawyer Joseph Tacopina, said in a statement posted on Guilfoyle’s verified Twitter account.
Tacopina said Guilfoyle’s legal team called for a break when committee members he described as “notorious for leaking information” also took part in the remote interview. He said those concerns “were validated as the Committee within less than two minutes leaked news of the break to the media.”
The House committee now will move to subpoena Guilfoyle, Tim Mulvey, spokesman for the panel, said.
(However, should an unfortunate spider show up at any time it will be squished by the Texas Two-Step boots or the Jumpin’ fer Joy boots or the old worn-out toe-tapping shoes.)
:-D
Thanks, djstex!
The two Great Georges - Jones and Strait!
:-)
LOL.
Those boots come in handy, pax.
hmmmm... as I read that article again, I could read it as TSA mandate only for airports...
Dogs copy their owners.
Is that your dog?
New @AP reporting tonight: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was asked to evacuate Kyiv at the behest of the U.S. government but turned down the offer. An American official tells me Zelenskyy said, “The fight is here; I need ammunition, not a ride.” pic.twitter.com/oSpa1vdX29— James LaPorta (@JimLaPorta) February 26, 2022
I don’t have any dogs right now but I think I want this one.
Or this one.
But NOT this one.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
I don't have any particular insight into Putin - though I have read a lot of things much smarter people than I am have written about him. But I do know Russians, and I know Ukrainians, and I know Ukrainian Jews. 2/? Putin, I think, lives in a pre-1991/92 world. A world in which the USSR was one whole, if dysfunctional package, of which Ukraine was a part. But here's the thing. Putin has lost touch - hello, bunker mentality. 3/? He has lost touch with ordinary Russians - though he is able to mold them (particularly those who watch state-run TV or read state-run newspapers) every which way he wants, the younger generation is accessing media he doesn't control. And Putin is famously tech averse... 4/? But even more so, he has lost touch with Ukrainians. Ukrainians who _do_ have access to dissenting media, and who, since 1991, have developed a sense of statehood. 5/? When you surround yourself only with sycophants, suck-ups and people who are afraid of you, you never hear dissent, you lose that finger on the pulse. So Putin in 2022 is looking at Ukraine from a Soviet/1992 perspective. But today's Russia is not the Soviet union. 6/? Ukrainians living in the USSR at least had an ideology, broken though it was, to believe in. The USSR was the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. It was not Russia. Sure, Russia was the big boy, sure the USSR was ruled out of Moscow. But the USSR ≠ Russia. 7/? Now, when you were (as I was) a Ukrainian living in the USSR, you saw yourself as fighting for socialism, for equality. Sure, that wasn't the reality, but at least you could tell yourself that there was something bigger than you that you were suffering for. 8/? Soviets are intimately acquainted with suffering for the greater good. But here's the thing: there's a difference between suffering for a cause, and suffering for what everyone in RU and in UKR knows is a corrupt oligarchy that exists to enrich one man and his entourage. 9/? Back to Afghanistan. Putin, I think, saw 2021 Taliban takeover of Afghanistan, and that galvanized him to invade Ukraine. I reckon he thought he'd roll into Kyiv the way the Taliban rolled into Kabul. Thought ordinary Ukrainians wouldn't resist. No bloodshed. Clean. Quick. 10/? He saw himself in the role of the Taliban. Banished by those pesky Americans, sitting, waiting, building, ready to pounce. He saw what the US did to Afghanistan, the impotence of Europe on that front, and thought: Aha, I'm going to go "liberate" Ukraine. 11/? On Monday, in his frankly unhinged speech, he told Ukrainians to lay down their arms and return to their families, and they would not be harmed. This, I think, was his expectation. He thought many, if not most, Ukrainians would do so. 12/? He thought they wouldn't care who was installed in Kyiv to govern them. And you know what: If he had done this while Yanukovych or even Poroshenko was in power, if he had done this while he had career-politicians and/or his buddies in Kyiv, he might have been right. 13/? But Zelenskiy is a clean-skin. He's a satirist funnyman who until v. recently made dick jokes for a living. His ascent to the presidency, unlike Putin's, was driven by desire to make things better, to get rid of graft and corruption. Don't get me wrong, he's not perfect. 14/? But suddenly, Ukraine had a president it could believe in. A president who wasn't a cynical appointee of some other country, who wasn't someone seeking the presidency to enrich themselves. ( And when Putin attacked Ukraine, Zelenskiy, a 44-year-old Colbert-type — he didn't get on the first plane out of Kyiv, a la Ashraf Ghani and co. He stayed. He is still in Kyiv. When Putin talked about decapitating Ukraine's government, he is not talking metaphorically. 16/? Putin literally wants to take out Zelenskiy, because he can't control him. He has no baggage. And instead of fleeing and running a government in exile from somewhere safe, Zelenskiy stayed, knowing what fate awaited him. His prime minister - stayed. His cabinet - stayed. 17/? Zelenskiy is saying: Look, we are all here. We aren't running, we're fighting. And so, Ukrainians, ordinary Ukrainians, they have something to fight for too. They have someone to believe in. 18/? So, Putin, expected Afghanistan 2021. But he got Afghanistan 1979. Ukrainians aren't rolling over or welcoming back an old friend. They are digging in for war. And that's an ugly scenario indeed.19/? To be clear, here is what I think (again, this is not reported fact, this is my personal read): Putin expected Ukrainians to lay down their arms, Zelenskiy to flee. He could then install a Putinist puppet in Kyiv, take Donbas and Crimea and probably a chunk more ... 20/? He could take out Ukraine's military capabilities (his "demilitarization"), have a friendly mate he could control next door, and then roll back to Russia. Declare his "peacekeeping" mission over after a few days. Few casualties. West may grumble, but not enough to hurt. 21/? What Putin got instead: Zelenskiy stayed and mobilized Ukrainians. The army fought much much harder than he thought they would. People did not lay down their arms. For the most part, they didn't run away from the war. And now it gets messy. What's Putin to do? 22/? Russians, doped up as they are on RT and TASS and Rossiya 24, well, they're starting to see their favourite singers and actors speak up about what is a FULL SCALE WAR! They're seeing photos of bombed kindergartens, dead kids. They're seeing this isn't going to be a walkover. 23/? And oh, this is going to hurt. It'll hurt Putin. It'll hurt his entourage. In the words of a now sadly deleted tweet from the account of @JosepBorrellF , no more Gucci lifestyle (though, actually, they can still get Gucci). All those oligarchs _must_ be getting nervous now. 24/? So, Putin expected a cake walk but there's no cake to be seen. What's he to do? Try to kill Zelenskiy? He'll die a martyr. How do you control a country of 44 million Ukrainians who suddenly have something to believe in? 25/?Watching Putin's attack on Ukraine play out, I am struck by the thought that Putin learned the lesson from the wrong Afghanistan war. And he has also vastly misunderstood post-Zelenskiy Ukraine. 1/?— Zoya Sheftalovich (@zoyashef) February 26, 2022
As much as most of my UA friends complained about Zelensky before all this, he’s proved himself as a true leader. He led from the front, didn’t escape Kiev even when had multiple opportunities to do so. I expect most people feel this way now and support has skyrocketed. 1/3— Eugene Katchalov (@EugeneKatchalov) February 26, 2022
He surprised everyone and this will make the Ukrainian fighting spirit even stronger. If god forbid he dies, he’d become a martyr and that much stronger to galvanize everyone. With so many citizens having guns now, partisan warfare vs any occupation is a almost guaranteed. 2/3— Eugene Katchalov (@EugeneKatchalov) February 26, 2022
Putin can cause more bloodshed and continue destroying infrastructure, but it’s difficult to see how he “wins”. He expects unconditional surrender, in my opinion anything except that is a humiliating loss for him. I pray to see the day he pays for his crimes. #Ukraine 3/3— Eugene Katchalov (@EugeneKatchalov) February 26, 2022
We’re trying to contact our friends across UA now. Many are saying was a really scary night with a lot of shooting/explosions. Kiev seems to have gone quiet over the past 30mins or so. People are going back up to their homes to quickly shower/eat. #Ukraine— Eugene Katchalov (@EugeneKatchalov) February 26, 2022
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCBaH1Pjywc
Russian tank crushes Ukrainian car with civilian inside
The person survived with minor injuries
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.