Advertisement
We_Rise

PSS Telegram [Translated]

Jul 19th, 2020
467
0
Never
Not a member of Pastebin yet? Sign Up, it unlocks many cool features!
text 33.63 KB | None | 0 0
  1. \f1 \cf0 Igor Danchenko (
  2. \f0 PSS) Telegram (https://t.me/s/littlewonderyou) - Sept. 27, 2017 to Mar. 22, 202\
  3. \pard\tx720\tx1440\tx2160\tx2880\tx3600\tx4320\tx5040\tx5760\tx6480\tx7200\tx7920\tx8640\pardirnatural\partightenfactor0
  4. \cf0 \
  5. \
  6. Once again, geopolitical (!) Conclusions are made based on the movements of one LNG tanker in the middle of the Atlantic. With airplanes, yachts, coffee grounds, forecasts will sometimes be more accurate. However, such movements are more difficult to monitor. You need to know which plane, which yacht, and where.\
  7. \
  8. Mirzayanov, Rink, Carbon on the air. Each of them is certainly indirectly ... or even directly confirmed by the trace element of the British version. 15 minutes of glory is a terrible force.\
  9. \
  10. \'93Sanctions Strategy\'94\
  11. \
  12. In December 1981, the new American administration announced the imposition of additional sanctions against the USSR because of the support that it provided to the "repressive policy of the Polish leadership." Aeroflot flights to the USA were suspended, the Soviet purchasing commission in New York was closed, oil and gas equipment was stopped, licenses for the sale of electronic computers were discontinued, negotiations on a new long-term grain agreement were delayed, the renewal of the energy agreement was refused, on scientific and technical cooperation, in space, bilateral exchange agreements have been revised. This group of sanctions was supplemented by those that were adopted by the former administration of J. Carter in connection with the intervention of the USSR in Afghanistan.\
  13. \
  14. Western European and Japanese companies were unhappy with the sanctions, and the American administration had to put pressure on partners to force them to act in line with American policy. Western European corporations associated with the import of Soviet energy resources were particularly irritated (Soviet gas accounted for 15-20% of the energy consumption of Western European countries). These companies worked together with the USSR on the \'93gas-pipes\'94 project, according to which they were supposed to supply large diameter pipes to the Soviet Union for gas transportation, and the USSR \'97 to build a gas pipeline from them from West Siberian gas fields to the Federal Republic of Germany and start on it gas supplies to western consumers.\
  15. \
  16. On December 29, 1981, Washington officially announced a ban on US companies from participating in this project. The decision affected the interests of 60 companies. In June 1982, the ban was extended to their branches in Europe. The requirement to curtail cooperation with the USSR in the field of energy extended not only to American, but also to European companies, as well as Japanese companies (the latter negotiated with the USSR on the development of cooperation in the development of gas and oil fields on the shelf of Sakhalin Island).\
  17. \
  18. In November 1982, the US administration issued a statement regarding the gas-pipe project. Requirements were formulated for companies doing business with the USSR: not to conclude new contracts for the purchase of Soviet gas, tighten control over the sale of strategic products in the USSR, and establish strict control over financial transactions with the USSR. Sanctions were not critical to the development of relations between the Soviet Union and Western European countries. \'94\
  19. \
  20. 2. Jackson-Vanik, Afghanistan, Poland, etc. The USSR / Russia has always had nothing to answer. They responded with isolation and a buildup of military spending. No China has come and will not come to the rescue. Always all hope for a good relationship with Europe.\
  21. \
  22. \'93Vladimir Putin asked if the region needed additional help. Aman Tuleyev replied that his strength is enough. \'93A specialist works at each meter, if there are more, they will only interfere with each other,\'94 the governor said. "\
  23. And he also headed the headquarters and was worried.\
  24. \
  25. PMCs of the Russian Federation remain in the gray zone:\
  26. they are not legislatively enshrined in Russia as contradicting the constitution; but they are not banned. Not a constitution under them to change? Compromise option.\
  27. \
  28. Excuse me.\
  29. Poor and insignificant thoughts to justify the ass, without which nothing positive happens. And with the same success, the arguments are against. Poop believe that they have no place in shit. And shit thinks that poop is no match for them. The toilet is neutral. A compromise has been found.\
  30. \
  31. Usually, Putin\'92s agenda was limited to an external or internal problem. When there are several of them at once, a hitch occurs. Who worked well and took a hit - even if the strike itself was not his job, he will remain in the team. And who sat out, although he was supposed to participate? However, I remind you that Putin spoke about personnel policy back in 2009 with Kolesnikov: http://ruspioner.ru/cool/m/single/1999\
  32. \
  33. \
  34. Do not hear the candidate of psychological sciences Yu.S. Shoigu. Not substituted: http://www.mchs.gov.ru/document/375633\
  35. \
  36. In the broadest of terms: \
  37. \
  38. - From now on all Russian oligarchs are officially at risk. \
  39. - The line between private business and the Russian state is as blurry as ever. \
  40. - Ironically, oligarchs brought this upon themselves. That equidistance that Putin proposed 17 years ago was never really in place. It promptly crystallised three groups: 1) 2003 (Market: Yukos)-2008 (Marker: Evroset) - Khodorkovsky and a few others tried to remain independent and didn\'92t want to share. 2) 2004 (Marker: Faberge eggs)-present. Subsequently, many others went to the other extreme: fervently manifested their loyalty, were ready to compromise and share proceeds across the board. 3) 2009 (Market: Pikalyovo)-2017 (Marker: Alfa and Russian defence sector) Most stayed in the grey zone, cooperated with the Kremlin for various reasons. Naturally, this largest group didn\'92t anticipate Putin\'92s third term adventurism at first. Then they then were in denial. There was an assumption that if they don\'92t say a word about Crimea and deny corruption and the rest, sanctions wouldn\'92t hit them. \
  41. \
  42. And yet, here we are. What a drama!\
  43. \
  44. Even Vesti publishes a reminder of access to Telegram. A wacky story with this ban. She only emphasizes the nervousness of officials. https://hitech.vesti.ru/article/821443/\
  45. \
  46. Rusal has suspended the export of Al. Nothing. Part of the supply will go to Rosrezerv.\
  47. \
  48. Lavrov is right: the information background around the poisoning of the Skripals is bzzzz\
  49. All key findings have already been made.\
  50. \
  51. https://t.me/littlewonderyou/53\
  52. \
  53. The sanctions are more likely to provoke not nationalization, but simply a large-scale redistribution of property, starting with hiding, fragmentation, and somewhere nationalization. Of course, these processes are already accompanied by dissatisfaction of the elites, their more intense underhanded struggle. The political outcome of the sanctions is unclear, and will not be clear, at least in 2018.\
  54. \
  55. Without Iranian sanctions - a meaningless selection: http://top.rbc.ru/photoreport/19/06/2014/930044.shtml\
  56. The benchmark, the worst-case scenario, is still on them.\
  57. \
  58. Young loves from Kommersant:\
  59. \
  60. \'93It is known that politicians are not included in the list based on a scientific analysis, but on the basis of an assessment exclusively by Time journalists. It is curious whether Vladimir Putin will include other authoritative publications in his list of the most influential people in the world. \'94\
  61. \
  62. \
  63. About Al was right. Rosrezerv to help, but it\'92s half measures, as well as nationalization, as well as quasi-nationalization, as well as, in fact, temporary nationalization, as well as financial assistance. The sanctions are the fifth (!) Year, but there is no strategy. Only the Ministry of Foreign Affairs pours conspiracy theories in response to ultimatums, and the GDP relies on big muddy deals with reputable partners. Consider that Kortrofak has long been created.\
  64. \
  65. \
  66. I watched the news, went to a ballet (English-Scottish-Danish-Swedish), and thought for the Russian Geographical Society: \'93Polustrovo with noodles. We live well. \'94\
  67. \
  68. \
  69. https://t.me/adequarium/190\
  70. You can also plant aluminum cucumbers on a canvas field.\
  71. \
  72. \
  73. Deripaska said that he did not intend to lose control of Rusal, and if the sanctions continued, he would refuse to export aluminum. He once finished mass advertising of aluminum cans for drinks. Now, in order to compensate for exports, he should invest in advertising domestic aircraft and yachts. Perhaps, regional aviation and water taxis have great prospects.\
  74. \
  75. https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/3619660\
  76. \
  77. Solid makeup\
  78. \
  79. Drove to Louisiana on my dr.\
  80. \
  81. \
  82. And in the cemetery. Without strawberries.\
  83. \
  84. \
  85. It's nice when they notice a book, to the creation of which I had a hand and a head. The topic is extremely interesting. Perhaps I will continue to study.\
  86. By the way, there is also a trade component of the war: sanctions, embargoes, loans, of course Lend-Lease.\
  87. \
  88. Medvedev is still the most convenient prime minister. Surprisingly, he was not sunk between the elections and the inauguration of Putin. Because they didn\'92t drown, he was the most convenient and loyal to Putin prime minister, and not because he was Teflon. Let's see how much he will stay in the new old place. He is supposed to at some point have to be replaced by a successor if he himself does not become him again.\
  89. \
  90. Built a pond. Right. Everyone is happy. But not the soil, the worst rainfall of the year. And then you have to work in emergency mode. Everything is OK, but if it had not worked ankle-deep in clay in a thunderstorm, the fish would not have survived.\
  91. The dilemma of authoritarian leaders and their fish: everything is fine, but suddenly a thunderstorm. Forecasters made a mistake. The neighbors took the wrong water. Third-party builders call? While they arrive, everything will be washed off, and then they will bill ...\
  92. Where are you, fish, without me, your irrigation Ozimandia?\
  93. \
  94. https://www.rbc.ru/society/15/05/2018/5afaa5299a7947fd7c098af0\
  95. Another diagnosis\
  96. \
  97. For so many years everyone has been worried about Abramovich. And he has been doing very well for 25 years now. At least go to his successors.\
  98. \
  99. He spoke at the BRICS conference. He said that this is not even a club, but a platform; and there are projects - know finance and insure risks. And the Foreign Ministry (several countries) again has a complete show-window and diplomacy: BRICS is (hereinafter, big numbers). In their line they seem constructive.\
  100. \
  101. \pard\pardeftab560\slleading20\partightenfactor0
  102.  
  103. \f1 \cf0 The very point I\'92ve been making for months, further strengthened by Iran sanctions. OFAC regarded them as best practice... proof that sanctions policies are effective... that they are not intended to punish an average citizen... can reach their goal... especially when applied by the West+ in unison... \
  104. \
  105. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-22/u-s-sanction-power-may-be-reaching-its-limit\
  106. \
  107. Yes, that's only in Britain and the USA you still need to go through a full-fledged filter of elections, and not one. It\'92s a little different from the Soviet one, isn't it?\
  108. \
  109. Due to the appointment of Dmitry Patrushev to the post of Minister of Agriculture, there is a lot of talk about political dynasties today. Such political families exist in British politics, and tried to select the most interesting examples.\
  110. \
  111. 1) For nine years (1983-1992), Neil Kinnock led the Labor Party and managed to seriously reform it. In fact, it was under Kinnock that the very foundation was laid that Tony Blair would use in a couple of years. After 20 years, his son Stephen Kinnock was elected to the traditional Labor district of Abervon in Wales. Before following in his father's footsteps and joining the Labor Party, Stephen studied at Cambridge and even worked in St. Petersburg where he mastered the Russian language. Interestingly, Stephen Kinnock's wife is former Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmitt. Both members of the Kinnock family represent the moderate wing of the Labor Party and are in stiff opposition to Jeremy Corbin.\
  112. \
  113. 2) Sometimes such family stories seem completely unbelievable. Such is the story of the Savar family. For a long time, Muhammad Savard represented the Glasgow Central district in the British Parliament. In 2010, Muhammad decided to leave the seat of the deputy and transferred it directly to his own son Anas Savar. Anas Savard managed to win in 2010, but after five years, his son lost his father\'92s district and went to work in the Scottish Parliament. Quite surprisingly, the political career of Muhammad Sawar developed further. The former British managed to lead the Punjab province in Pakistan.\
  114. \
  115. 3) Perhaps there is almost no politician more vivid in British politics than the current Minister of Foreign Affairs, Boris Johnson. However, few people know that Boris\'92s brother, Joe Johnson, is the current Minister of Transport. Joe is the younger brother of Boris and, like the eldest ten years ago, is considered one of the rising stars in the party. Joe has already managed to celebrate the work of the Minister for University Affairs, where he actively advocated for freedom of speech in the university environment.\
  116. \
  117. 4) This list would not be complete without one of the main representatives of the old conservative elite, Sir Nikolaos Sojems. Few can boast of such a rich pedigree. Nicholas is the grandson of Winston Churchill himself. To this it is worth adding that the deputies in the Soyames family were two great-grandfathers, a cousin and uncle. The political future was predetermined from birth.\
  118. \
  119. \
  120. How glad I am not to participate in this clown. But they watched the new film \'93It\'94 for the company, so that the young teenager would not be so scared. There every 26 years, it seems, it rises from the sewer - no matter how you kill it.\
  121. \
  122. Now Babchenko has three birthdays a year. Small children envy.\
  123. \
  124. Candies "Imperial" in a salary\
  125. \
  126. They wrote recently: what about black boxes. Nothing. The record ends.\
  127. \
  128. In one weekly digest, DAM is called vice president. Maybe.\
  129. \
  130. Trade and sanctions wars have reached global proportions. These are not some WTO disputes.\
  131. The future of the countries and the regional blocs, and globalization, the WTO - who fought, that ran.\
  132. \
  133.  
  134. \f0 Public transport - for ours\
  135. \
  136. We studied Georgetown. Isabella understands Russian and East European, but not Eurasian. What is Eurasian? Dugin knows him.\
  137. \
  138.  
  139. \f2 \uc0\u55357 \u56834
  140. \f0 https://strana.ua/news/144800-pisatelnitsa-nitsoj-ushla-s-doprosa-v-sbu-potrebovav-chtoby-sotrudniki-vedomstva-vyuchili-ukrainskij-i-obvinila-hritsaka-v-nesootvetstviijzima -dolzhnosti.html\
  141. \
  142. https://t.me/rt_russian/7935\
  143. \
  144. Boredom? But there is time to simply engage in transcendentalism. https://youtu.be/ydoyweQf1CY\
  145. \
  146. Irkutsk raccoon Nafanya predicted Russia's victory in the match with Saudi Arabia\
  147. \
  148. Again Saudi talk about the optimal price of oil. And Sechin turned on: the \'93comfortable\'94 range determines. It is clear that oil producers are interested in a predictable and rather high price. However, as soon as these conversations begin, the market suspects that they are trying to manipulate the price.\
  149. However, these mechanisms do not work. They no longer worked 15 years ago, when the Saudis drew 25 per barrel, and now, when they draw 70-80.\
  150. Maybe the Irkutsk raccoon Nafanya will tell?\
  151. \
  152. Legal support:\
  153. http://econri.org/2018/06/19/%d0%b3%d1%83-%d0%b8%d1%8d%d0%b8-%d0%b7%d0%b0%d0%ba%d0 % bb% d1% 8e% d1% 87% d0% b8% d0% bb-% d0% b4% d0% be% d0% b3% d0% be% d0% b2% d0% be% d1% 80-% d0 % be-% d1% 81% d0% be% d1% 82% d1% 80% d1% 83% d0% b4% d0% bd% d0% b8% d1% 87-2 /\
  154. \
  155. Competition for the European gas market will not be limited to competition. The US will support LNG exports, and the Russian Federation will pay contractors for the SP-2 gas pipeline. Europe definitely wins in any situation. And competitors would pay off).\
  156. \
  157. Vekselberg is increasingly leaving under Chemezov. Rostec signs a contract with the Urals Renova Turbine Works for 24 yards. Now that there is no alternate aerodrome in the United States, and partners under house arrest and assets have been seized, allies must be sought. Chemezov is considered one of Putin's closest people, and plus significant contract discounts will make it possible to talk about supporting the economy. And there\'92s even something in it - it\'92s time to give it back, because the economy has a paradoxical situation. Few of the oligarchs, who received countless wealth during privatization, do not invest in the economy, invest nothing. And it was American sanctions that changed this issue - the paradox\
  158. \
  159. I don\'92t understand the purpose: paper clip, bookmark? ..\
  160. \
  161. LNG is growing.\
  162. Russia is not mentioned, but also slowly in the trend, despite the sanctions.\
  163. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-lng-supply-analysis/new-wave-of-mega-lng-projects-is-approaching-idUSKBN1KR15D\
  164. \
  165. The first package of US economic sanctions against Iran entered into force on Tuesday night. And although these are not sanctions on the export of Iranian oil (they will come into effect on November 4), they are also large-scale restrictions. They cover a ban on selling US dollars to Tehran, on operations with Iranian rials, on trading in gold and other valuable metals, as well as steel, aluminum, graphite and coal, on the supply of passenger aircraft to Iran and on importing automobiles from the country. Sanctions are extraterritorial in nature, i.e. they concern not only American companies, but generally all.\
  166. \
  167. By the way, after the lifting of previous sanctions, US companies were not too eager for Iran, unlike European ones. In 2017, exports of goods and services from the EU to Iran reached 10.8 billion euros, and imports from Iran - 10.1 billion euros. A number of large investment projects have been launched or planned. Therefore, in order to convince Tehran to comply with the terms of the nuclear deal, its European participants must protect their companies from extraterritorial actions of the United States. On August 6, EU diplomacy head Federica Mogherini and the foreign ministers of Germany, France and the United Kingdom issued a statement deciding to protect European firms involved in legitimate business with Iran. The statement said that on August 7, the European Union will activate the so-called blocking statute, which declares legally void in the EU any decisions of foreign courts issued in support of sanctions, and prohibits European structures to comply with these sanctions. The statute also allows EU firms to judicially recover losses from actions by third parties that comply with US sanctions.\
  168. \
  169. Now it remains to observe how decisive the US administration and the European authorities are in the practical implementation of their declarations. Many large European companies (for example, Total, Shell, Siemens, Maersk, Bosch, Peugeot) with large-scale business interests in the United States have already announced their intention to comply with Washington\'92s sanctions. US experts predict early sanctions against several non-first-order foreign firms to teach others a lesson. However, in terms of the extent of future damage to the Iranian economy, the behavior of companies from China and India, which are the main importers of Iranian oil, will be more important. In a situation of a trade war between the United States and China, companies from the Middle Kingdom will hardly be afraid of American sanctions.\
  170. \
  171. Alexander Ivakhnik\
  172. \
  173. Opinion of the Special Representative of the President of the Russian Federation on environmental issues, ecology and transport:\
  174. https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/3707566\
  175. \
  176. \'93- What do you think, when can the hot phase of the conflict in the east of Ukraine end?\
  177. \
  178. \'93There are no prospects for this under the current government in Kiev.\'94\
  179. \
  180. C - convenience\
  181. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/jim-ratcliffe-brexit-uk-richest-man-monaco-move-tax-haven-eu-leave-a8484211.html\
  182. \
  183. They were afraid that Russia would be equated with Iran in terms of sanctions, but sometimes they are put on a par with the DPRK. And with China, which may be flattering in foreign policy propaganda, but no more.\
  184. \
  185. \'93All the money was converted into rubles,\'94 Volodin emphasized. \'93Therefore, she bought an apartment with her own money,\'94 he concluded.\
  186. \
  187. With Telegram it becomes clearer.\
  188. \
  189. https://vimeo.com/286751571\
  190. \
  191. Unlike the previous chapters of the LPR and DPR, Zakharchenko left as a hero for his supporters. His successor has a chance to either destroy the DNI, or, conversely, reduce the degree of militarism and add legitimacy. We'll see.\
  192. \
  193. By the way, Polina almost complied with paragraph 4 of her instructions - she found a security officer (according to her own testimonies in a showdown with Baronova).\
  194. \
  195. https://t.me/littlewonderyou/126\
  196. \
  197.  
  198. \f1 On the Skripal case: \
  199. \
  200. Obviously, what\'92s publicly known doesn\'92t paint the full picture, and there is plenty of room for investigation and speculation. \
  201. \
  202. It is, for example, possible that these two guys were a diversion team while someone else sprayed the agent on the doorknob... It is possible they were there only to deliver the agent, or to dispose of it, or even to threaten Yulia Skripal to make sure she does the job - didn\'92t she arrive the day before?.. Some versions are more plausible than others, some are outright conspiracy theories. And there\'92ll also be pressure on the UK authorities and on the Russian authorities to make more things public, to cooperate, etc. Let\'92s not forget - at least one person did die from \'91Novichok\'92. \
  203. \
  204. However, two things are clear. There might be more sanctions on Russia or at least the ones in place won\'92t be lifted for quite a while. And the West will trust Russia less and less - the fact that the feeling is mutual doesn\'92t help. Sanctions and fundamental mistrust. Thus, I find the latest interview a ridiculous farce - nothing funny about it.\
  205. \
  206. The rules in the oil industry are endlessly reviewed. Dvorkovich gave lobbyists. Now Kozak has taken. Its revision will end with a redistribution and increase in taxes.\
  207. \
  208. It can be done differently: and so that no one would have doubts about honesty, the GDP missed two out of five times.\
  209. \
  210. Losses of aircraft (both in battle and as a result of accidents) during the war in Syria 2011-2018.\
  211. \
  212. .\
  213. https://youtu.be/W0mRx-kQATs\
  214. \
  215. Limited Agenda. It is not to be re-elected.\
  216. \
  217. "Almost every pillar was surrounded by doves of the world ... Only a shadow from them, from these doves, as from a two-headed one." Petro Poroshenko delivered a message to the deputies of the Verkhovna Rada. We have chosen the most interesting statements.\
  218. vdmsti.ru/aakL\
  219. \
  220. Now, even in Khakassia, these criminal teachers have spoiled democracy.\
  221. Of course, there are more subtle interpretations; but it seems that after 13 years of trying to invent a bicycle, it\'92s time to abolish the post-Beslan system, to return to a complex, but more democratic system of federalism.\
  222. \
  223. Back at uni some joked: what would Putin do? And then built elaborate theories. I usually said that most likely he\'92d do nothing. Well, here is another face-saving chance to fire top brass and cloak and dagger, but will he? \
  224. \
  225. Emphasis on operations abroad and powerful image have distracted attention and drained resources, and have now lead to catastrophic loss of governance across the board at home. \
  226. \
  227. Successful March elections only worsened the situation, exposing more irreconcilable issues and prompting some actors to improvise. Call it anything - crony capitalism, sovereign democracy, super-presidential anything - but in this century it is simply impossible to effectively govern a polity that has evolved into a feudal state. A feudal state can\'92t be modernised and still remain feudal.\
  228. \
  229. It was worth the price of oil, show-offs in the area - over the edge. That's just sanctions haunt. No one will enter everything at once. Yes, maybe they reach the ceiling, almost exhausted themselves, but from the point is a gradual increase in the degree in the hope of influencing the situation.\
  230. \
  231. The election of governors diverted attention. Ramzan\'92s appeasement with the transfer of Chechenneftekhimprom failed. He immediately felt weakness.\
  232. \
  233. It\'92s as if its 10 September 2009 again... http://www.vopreco.ru/rus/redaction.files/10-18.pdf\
  234. \
  235. \'93There was little time, we often left after midnight, and they even brought us free sausages from the buffet. For a long time we could not agree on much, but even during our hottest discussions, no one shouted - it is useless. The fact is that in the Kremlin all the halls are very deaf - they were still being built by Stalin for themselves. So without a microphone no one can hear you at all, and this disciplines \'94\
  236. https://esquire.ru/archive/2255-constitution-75/\
  237. \
  238. https://t.me/Sanctions_Inspector/1311\
  239. \
  240. Pensioners in law - this is the name in the criminal world of about 100 elderly thieves in law and criminal authorities who are now serving sentences in prisons and penal colonies of the FSIN. They are supposed to receive a minimum social pension from the state, but they live on old-age payments from a thieves common fund.\
  241. \
  242. Of the 584 thousand Russian prisoners serving time, more than 23 thousand can count on retirement. Convicts with work experience of at least 10 years can rely on a retirement pension, and those who do not have such experience can only rely on a social one. The size of the social pension for 2018 is just over five thousand rubles, however, taking into account the regional subsistence minimum, the real pension is an average of eight thousand.\
  243. \
  244. But in the colonies there are pensioners who do not count on social or labor pensions. There are about 100 of them. This is the elite of the criminal world - authorities and thieves in law. According to criminal concepts, they are forbidden to work for the state or receive help from it.\
  245. \
  246. - One of them is the 65-year-old thief in law Zakhary Kalashov (Shakro Molodoy), who in March 2018 was sentenced by the Nikulin District Court of Moscow to almost 10 years in prison for giving a bribe.\
  247. \
  248. For the first time, the question of paying pensions to thieves in law was raised at a gathering in Krasnodar in 1986. And then it was decided that a pension of 300 rubles would be paid out monthly to the elderly \'93thieves\'94 from the common fund, which in those years was comparable to the salary of the head of the enterprise.\
  249. \
  250. The decision of the Krasnodar gathering about pensions is still valid, only the amounts have changed: now it is hundreds of thousands of rubles.\
  251. \
  252. #history #throwaway\
  253. \
  254. https://themoscowtimes.com/news/russian-poet-mayakovsky-was-first-rapper-culture-minister-claims-63207\
  255. \
  256. Not a single question. How do states express condolences over the massacre? Russia? To the Crimea? Ukraine? To Putin? Aksyonov? Or not express. Or abstract in the tape: worried and saddened by the events in Kerch, Crimea?\
  257. \
  258. Medvedev and Kozak have radically different tasks and approaches to sanctions.\
  259. \
  260. Valdai 2018, No. 15. Well, the format at the highest level has changed. What started as a semi-closed roundtable discussion evolved into a semi-closed press conference and, indeed, into a solo performance. I know it\'92s no joke, but it\'92s a joke.\
  261. \
  262. Swarm, Urbantino, swarm, until Jah launched the tram.\
  263. \
  264. Master Cagliostro on the dangers of smoking in the middle lane. I do not know how this is possible.\
  265. https://m.vz.ru/economy/2018/10/19/946926.html\
  266. \
  267. Someone\'92s Grandpa to Be Late for WWIII Commemorations, Has Other Commitments.\
  268. https://www.rferl.org/a/putin-to-attend-world-war-i-commemorations-in-paris-next-month/29547108.html\
  269. \
  270. Direct geopolitical disaster https://t.me/dimsmirnov175/3360\
  271. \
  272. Sure. A strong social network after all.\
  273. \
  274. \'93Very many of the current bosses and oligarchs of various levels can actually say\'93 thank you \'94to the Komsomol for developing their career - many began their ascent to a critical era precisely from the Komsomol organizations, and business partners or a successful managerial biography were also found there. I was told about one typical career on the day of decapsulation of the message of the Komsomol members of the 1960s in one of the regional capitals: the man who closed the Komsomol because of the collapse of the USSR carried out the process of solemnly pulling the letter out of the capsule. Having closed the local Komsomol, two years later he opened a casino almost in its place \'94\
  275. \
  276. Andrei Kolesnikov, program manager for the Carnegie Moscow Center, on the centenary of the Komsomol vdmsti.ru/akJG\
  277. \
  278. Distributed from scratch. The Church, with all its symbolism, is secondary in the modern world, and everyone knows this.\
  279. \
  280. Suddenly, the 12 year olds hit the season. Without a cultural context. It is enough for one of the guys to understand in Russian):\
  281. https://youtu.be/QiFBgtgUtfw\
  282. \
  283. So many colleagues are trying to curb the power of social media in order to reach out to everyone and finish before lunch. It seems to me, I am sure that this does not popularize, but corrodes social science.\
  284. \
  285. Award for pragmatism Yu.V. Tymoshenko\
  286. \
  287. Poroshenko about Russian sanctions: \'93I want to say that being in the list in Ukraine is like some kind of state award.\'94\
  288. \
  289. https://t.me/historyporn/4461\
  290. \
  291. According to Timchenko, she was \'93shown Telegram Simonyan\'94 and she writes in response to something, supposedly anticipating bad questions and fakes. Obviously, it is disingenuous about \'93being shown,\'94 and to answer not only directly, but simply honestly is weak.\
  292. I don\'92t know the details of the harassment, but it\'92s pretty clear. A fairly typical story, which does not mean that "everyone has it." It\'92s typical, and yet vile, it just doesn\'92t whiten, especially in modern Western society, especially in the journalistic environment, especially in the liberal journalistic environment.\
  293. \
  294. All the behavior of Timchenko (and Kolpakov) looks at least ridiculous ...\
  295. as when you come home, and the dog\'92s tail is pulled in, looks with guilty eyes, and is ready to caress ... And you are like this - hmm, definitely nothing of the kind happened - maybe some little thing. I\'92ll look in passing, I\'92ll tidy up my left foot. And then immediately look the other way and go about my business, just in case. And I\'92ll leave the dog in crumpled feelings - I won\'92t just treat you from the table today, because I\'92ll forget the next day anyway. And it is unlikely that this will happen again ... and in general I am an ardent fighter for animal rights. And, anticipating the bad questions and fakes, I\'92ll say that I\'92m not a bestial, or that there is something to mumble so that they notice, grin, and forget?\
  296. \
  297. The names of the great Russians are most easily called new airports, but they are not being built, they may not be needed. Renaming - not even PR - profanity.\
  298. \
  299. http://vteme.kz/news/kazakhstanskij_uchenyj_dokazal_chto_adam_byl_kazakhom/2018-12-17-442\
  300. \
  301. Venezuela. This is a country in which the crisis affects the oil market. All the time they let her through, focusing either on Saudi Arabia, then on Qatar, then on OPEC +, then on Brazil, then on China. The market balance in recent years is supported by the formula: plus US / minus Venezuela. The rest is secondary.\
  302. \
  303. So the oil industry in Russia, the USA, Saudi Arabia confusion in Venezuela is beneficial.\
  304. \
  305. But China does not.\
  306. \
  307. A strange attempt by Russia to push the gas theme in the Ukrainian elections. Is there really no more space for dialogue and influence. Even the subject of prisoner exchange was blown away.\
  308. \
  309. About the sanctions. Remove - will not remove. But introducing new ones is, in principle, pointless. I agree with Deripaska that you need to wait for the change of elites. Apparently, at least half a dozen current presidents, prime minister, chancellors. So, we wait another five years.\
  310. \
  311. At the same time, Deripaska himself demonstrated that something can be negotiated with the USA and Great Britain right now!\
  312. \
  313. Recently in the West notes flashed about such low lifting costs in Russia that you can keep the market together with the Saudis! At first I was surprised.\
  314. And now I look - to see, it was an echo of artillery preparation for the remarks of GDP at the Arctic Forum.\
  315. \
  316. https://www.interfax.ru/amp/655701 here, too, not everything is going smoothly without complex cooperation.\
  317. \
  318. For so many years they have been arguing about writing Kiev in aglitski and in general ... But how do you spell the capital of Kazakhstan -\
  319. Nur Sultan or Nursultan?\
  320. \
  321. \'93Congratulations on the award. All success to you, Vladimir Vladimirovich, in this difficult time and good health.\
  322. \
  323. Vladimir Putin: Thank you. "\
  324. \
  325. In the old days they talked about the "energy superpower", and now they are arguing about the "shoals".\
  326. \
  327. Ready for anything, well, so far almost everything, to urgently minimize tomorrow's protests. It is becoming increasingly clear that the nuts themselves were tightened.\
  328. \
  329. Partly blabber changes in the Criminal Code for drugs. And already many see this as a success, a bonus, establish an imaginary causal relationship. \'93We need to look carefully,\'94 the arbiter will say. Although it had nothing to do with drugs.\
  330. \
  331. Hints of Kiriyenko, Shoigu, and already historically a couple of ministers, governors, children, flash. No, everything is past. Successors are still at other posts, but at posts.\
  332. \
  333. Health to all indoor eagles)\
  334. \
  335. Mobilization in Russian. Difficult with a shrinking budget, but the pharmaceutical and medical sectors are about to change: takeovers with elements of nationalization. Plus, possibly, Rosrezerv is involved.
  336. \f0 \
  337. }
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement