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To: DAVEY CROCKETT; Velveeta
You could be correct about Putin.

The one thing that has not changed is Russia.

Whoever the world leader is, whoever is pulling the strings.

The missing piece for me in my thinking arrived last night.

That we have had a takeover in this country, by the left, by
the Democratic Socialist Party, another name for the communists, cannot be a doubt, our own government supports a website for them. The are no longer feeling they need to hide:

http://bernie.house.gov/pc/members.asp

There is more that I do not know, than that I do, but the one knowledge that has hit me in the face over and over is the fact that when the communists take over a country, they move out a percentage of the residents and move in Russian Citizens.

It is done by the train load, 100,000 in a week, per a military diary that I read. They go to Russia or to other fully Russian controlled countries.

Remember the Ukraine election last year? The election was almost won, by the "Russian vote".

It happened in Chechnya, it does not take much reading to pick up the exchange of people.

I assume that the good party members, of all pay grades, are the imports.

Somehow, I could not see a trainload of "Good ole beer drinking Rednecked Southerners" being shipped to another country, the word Militia keeps cropping into my mind.

I am a Texas born, so I can talk about our men, with pride,
I was still fighting the Civil war, until I was in my 20's.
LOL

So how do they replace a percentage of the Americans?

It has been done already.

20 Million of them.

20 Million American babies killed in abortion clinics.

20 million communists walked across our borders, the mexicans and all the other country's citizens that have been imported into America.

Whole towns taken over by foreigners.

All those political refugees, came from communist countries.

When you think about it, you will be able to fit in pieces that I am missing.

Maybe the first big move started after WW2, we took so many from Germany, I need more info on that, but know that there were large numbers moved here.

I am not talking about the real people fleeing from the terror of communism or other evil leaders, they are real and I am proud they came to us.

Nor, am I talking about the right or wrong of a woman getting an abortion.

I am talking sheer numbers, that 20 million who will never fight back against the invaders, or go to war to protect another country.

I am talking about the 20 million dead American babies, that could go out and do the jobs that we need the illegals to do today.

The abortion clinics have communist supporters, look at the protests, it is the communist groups who march and yell for free abortions.

Look at the photos of Hilary Clinton, marching in abortion protests and giving the closed fist Marxist salute.

Take a good look at the ads pushing the abortion clinics and you see people in the lead, who are not American.

I think we were taken over one American babies death at a time.

There, now you can think about it.........pretty scary.

Some will question why I posted this in the public and not privately, I did so, to start American's thinking.
111 posted on 01/04/2006 6:14:06 PM PST by nw_arizona_granny (Socialist=communist,elected to office,paid with your taxes: http://bernie.house.gov/pc/members.asp)
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To: nw_arizona_granny

AS RUSSIA IS DOWNGRADED TO "UNFREE" IS IT UNFIT TO HEAD THE G-8?

By Taras Kuzio

Wednesday, January 4, 2006


It is perhaps fitting that the Ukraine-Russia gas conflict has rekindled debates whether Russia truly belongs in the prestigious Group of Eight (G-8) advanced liberal democratic market economies. As the Wall Street Journal Europe (January 3) editorialized, "All of this makes Russia's assumption of the G-8 presidency this month not just ironic but almost as absurd as when Sudan chaired the U.N. Human Rights Commission. Moscow's inclusion in the club was never (and still isn't) justified on economic grounds." The conservative Daily Telegraph (January 3) was even blunter: "The West has to tell Russia that, plainly and simply, its conduct is unacceptable if it wishes to remain part of the club of civilized nations."

In its 2006 world human rights report, the New York-based human rights group Freedom House downgraded Russia from "partly free" to the status of "unfree" (freedomhouse.org). It upgraded Ukraine from "partly free" to "free."

The Russian-Ukrainian gas dispute is therefore no longer a conflict between two former Soviet republics but a conflict between an autocratic, non-democratic regime headed by "Putin's Mafia Politics" (Wall Street Journal Europe, January 3) and a democratizing regime headed by Viktor Yushchenko. As the Daily Telegraph (January 3) pointed out, "The methods of gangsterism and blackmail now being used by [Russian gas giant] Gazprom are reminiscent of the Soviet era."

Russia's downgrading to "unfree" places it on a par with other autocratic, non-democratic post-Soviet regimes, such as Belarus, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. Kyrgyzstan was promoted to "partly free" due to its "Tulip Revolution" in March 2005.

Russia was downgraded in part due to its growing hostility toward non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and civil society. In late December 2005 both houses of the Russian parliament approved a new law requiring NGOs to re-register and making it more difficult for re-registered groups to obtain foreign funding.

Such restrictions on civil society are only Russian President Vladimir Putin's latest move against the media, regional governors, oligarchs, and democratic political parties. Russia's attitudes towards civil society place it squarely in the same camp as the last dictatorship in Europe—Belarus—which is propped up by Russian gas subsidies.

Both Russia and Belarus believe that civil society only exists because of foreign funding, an attitude inherited from the former USSR when dissidents were routinely accused of being CIA or "Zionist" agents. This wariness is complicated by another Soviet-era holdover: conspiracy theories that blame the democratic "color revolutions" on the United States.

Freedom House downgraded Russia to "unfree" because of the marginalization of the political opposition, state control of the media, declines in judicial independence, growing "anti-democratic tendencies," and pressure on civil society. Freedom House noted Ukraine's improvement in all of these areas.

Even before the latest gas conflict erupted, Freedom House had condemned Russia's attempts at undermining democratic progress in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).

In contrast, Ukraine is the first CIS state to join the "free" group of countries in the world, vaulting ahead of the other three post-communist states to experience "color revolutions": Serbia (2000), Georgia (2003), and Kyrgyzstan (2005). Twelve of the post-communist East-Central European states are also designated as "free."

These rankings show how quickly the post-communist states in East-Central Europe and the CIS are radically diverging. They also confirm that 2004 and 2005 were pivotal years, during which Russia turned toward autocracy and Ukraine toward democracy.

Few Western commentators have bothered to connect Russia's growing autocracy and undemocratic regime at home with a return to a neo-Soviet foreign policy. It is now evident that Russia's aggressive stance towards Ukraine, evident both in the gas conflict and during Ukraine's 2004 presidential elections, indicates how closely Russia's domestic and foreign policies are interwoven.

The resignation of Russian presidential adviser Andrei Illarionov on the eve of the gas conflict brought home this inter-connection. The use of gas pressure, Illarionov claimed, was first tested inside Russia during elections for regional governors. After their success, the Russian authorities decided to apply them towards foreign countries (grani.ru, December 21).

The gas dispute is merely the latest evidence of the close connection between Russia's undemocratic domestic policies and its support for autocratic regimes abroad. Of the six CIS states that are designated by Freedom House as "unfree," four are politically aligned with Russia: Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan. Russia's support for Uzbekistan's brutal massacre of civilians in May 2005 led to Tashkent's re-alignment away from the United States and toward Russia.

During President George W. Bush's second term the United States has gradually become more aware of the links between Russia's undemocratic domestic and aggressive external policies. But it is "old Europe," inside the European Union, that is now finally having to come to terms with the real Russia under Putin.

Germany's new government has already changed that country's view of Russia. But traditionally Russophile France continues to view Putin's Russia favorably, a stance that, as the gas conflict proves, is out of touch with reality.
http://jamestown.org/edm/article.php?article_id=2370624


113 posted on 01/04/2006 6:31:45 PM PST by DAVEY CROCKETT (I can't stay on topic!)
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To: nw_arizona_granny

Good post granny.


120 posted on 01/04/2006 7:00:44 PM PST by DAVEY CROCKETT (I can't stay on topic!)
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To: nw_arizona_granny

A profound post, Granny.

Something's really bothering me today and I can't put my finger on it.

It's some kind of "undertow". Dark, very...very dark.

There's something to connect and I see most of us trying to connect it, but something big is missing from the picture.


159 posted on 01/05/2006 6:20:25 AM PST by Velveeta
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