June 19, 2026

World

Belarus Wants

Belarus opposition figure Maria Kolesnikova faces 12 years in prison

From www.euronews.com
2021-08-31 15:57:57

Excerpt:

 

Belarus” public prosecutor’s office requested 12 years in prison for Maria Kolesnikova, one of the main leaders of the opposition movement.

She is accused of wanting to overthrow the authoritarian regime of President Alexander Lukashenko.

The trial of 39-year-old Kolesnikova, which began in early August, comes after months of crackdowns in Belarus.

Thousands of opponents of the regime have been arrested or forced into exile since the disputed election of Lukashenko last year.

 

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Videos show Taliban taking over Kabul airport and celebrating with gunfire after US withdrawal

From www.businessinsider.co.za
2021-08-31 15:36:36

Excerpt:

The US has officially withdrawn from Afghanistan, with its last jet taking off from the country on Monday night.

Videos showed Taliban fighters celebrating the US exit with gunfire, and seizing Kabul’s airport, where thousands of Afghans had desperately tried to flee after they took over the country.

BBC News broadcast footage of the gunfire, with Chief International Correspondent Lyse Doucet saying she could hear celebratory tracer fire and guns going off. She said it was…

 

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Afghanistan’s healthcare system near collapse, aid agencies warn

From www.channelnewsasia.com
2021-08-30 19:08:55

Excerpt:

 

Afghanistan’s healthcare system is at risk of collapse, two major aid agencies told Reuters, after foreign donors stopped providing aid following the Taliban takeover.

After the United States withdraw the bulk of its remaining troops last month, the Taliban accelerated its military campaign, taking control of the capital Kabul on Aug 15.

International donors including the World Bank and European Union froze funding to Afghanistan shortly afterwards.

“One of the great risks for the health system here is basically to collapse because of lack of support,” said Filipe Ribeiro, Afghanistan representative for Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), one of the largest medical aid agencies in the country.

“The overall health system in Afghanistan is understaffed, under-equipped and underfunded, for years. And the great risk is that this underfunding will continue over time.”

Necephor Mghendi, Afghanistan head of the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent (IFRC), said…

 

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Rebels with a new cause: The challenges the Taliban face in governing Afghanistan

From www.cbc.ca
2021-08-31 08:00:00
Murray Brewster
Excerpt:

 

The Taliban finally have what they always wanted: Afghanistan all to themselves.

Two decades of butchery and warfare — almost three decades if you count their initial rise to power in the early 1990s — came to an ignominious end with the departure of the last U.S. troops and transport planes from Kabul on Monday.

Since the hardline Islamist movement is known to frown on dancing — when not outright banning it — you can probably expect little in the way of public celebration, at least nothing that western nations would recognize, or consider a party.

Whatever victory celebration the Taliban might have in mind, it will surely be tempered by the reality that they have inherited a country they helped to utterly ruin and are now overlords to a fractious, recalcitrant people who do not bow easily, even when bloodied.

Much has been written about the policy failures, the incoherence and the hubris of western nations, led by the United States, since the democratically-elected…

 

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After Afghanistan, America needs real investment to stave off Russia

By Brian Darling- Vladimir Putin must be laughing his way to the bank. As his nation makes inroads across Europe, America is in full, embarrassing retreat from Afghanistan.

I’ve supported leaving Afghanistan for years, yet President Joe Biden’s Afghanistan departure been shameful in its execution. Chaos and danger dominate the nation, even though Biden was presented with a number of less bad options to prevent American soldiers from spending another 20 years in Afghanistan. Our mission creep into a goal of training the Afghan military on defending freedom and the political class on how to run a country turned out to be a failed nation-building experiment…but Biden still chose the worst option. It is sad to see that country taking a big step backwards.

Part of our problem in Afghanistan was that we and our allies provided all of the infrastructure. But just as you can’t put lipstick on a pig, and no Shark Tank investor can make a company with bad financials succeed, America couldn’t force success on Afghanistan. And, so, we must learn the real lesson of our retreat: any foreign engagements must become investments which benefit all parties – America and the nations in which we are engaged.

I mentioned Putin earlier for a reason. America has spent billions supporting Ukraine’s military against Russia since 2014. But that’s the same military approach we took in Afghanistan. What America must help Ukraine do is actually stand on its own two feet, or once again we’ll have wasted billions to end up back at zero.

Ukraine, long been known as the ‘Breadbasket of Europe’ because of vast farmlands, should be a successful post-Soviet nation. Yet its GDP ranks at the bottom of Europe and, according to the World Bank, “Ukrainians continue to feel that more needs to be done to improve governance. Lack of trust in public institutions remains a fundamental concern for most people.” Corruption is a huge part of this problem – as The Heritage Foundation’s 2021 Index of Economic Freedom found, Ukraine’s government “will need to boost investor confidence by continuing to upgrade the investment code and by undertaking deep and comprehensive reforms to strengthen rule-of-law institutions and improve the protection of property rights, judicial effectiveness, and government integrity.” The economy of Ukraine should not be last in all of Europe with the natural resources it has available, yet corruptive interference in the economy and no respect for the rule of law has made Ukraine vulnerable to Russian interference.

Trade is an important element to put a wedge between Ukraine and Russia, and to build the kind of infrastructure that was never in place in Afghanistan, but why would anyone invest in such a corrupt nation? One case study shows what happened to one private-sector investor, TIU Canada. Michael Yurkovich, CEO of TIU Canada, was recently on Bloomberg where he pointed out that a Russian backed oligarch effectively shut down a solar plant because it competed against the oligarch’s business. Yurkovich alleged that the competitor, “directed one of his companies to violate the laws of Ukraine and he physically disconnected us” from the national power grid. The goal of TIU Canada was a diversification strategy that helped Ukraine to produce renewable energy that would forward the goal of energy independence from Russia. Instead, Yurkovich and other potential and actual investors in Ukraine are watching to see if the case will be resolved fairly – or if Ukraine is simply unable and unwilling to help its people by seeking positive foreign investment.

TIU Canada’s case has less to do with the specifics of this company and more to do with the way Ukraine will be viewed by free nations and foreign investors. The President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, has pledged to restore the rule of law and crackdown on corruption, yet situations like the TIU controversy persist. As Afghanistan falls apart thanks to the Taliban and our lack of proper investment, the Ukraine court system is being tested by the solar plant’s closure as the rest of the country is being tested Russia’s economic warfare via Nord Stream II and other actions. Government statements might be a good sign, but it’s useless without real action – action that must be prompted by the U.S. in a way which we never did in Afghanistan.

America can’t afford to lose to Russia as we lost to the Taliban. We must have a better, more comprehensive strategy for success that precludes nation-building and involves real, long-term strategic thinking. The neocons would say we should support Ukraine as we did Afghanistan; but our investment is only worthwhile if we learn the lessons of Afghanistan to create a stronger Ukraine to create a better America.

Brian Darling is former Sr. Communications Director for Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY).

 

CCP Does Cancel Culture On Its own Entertainment Industry

The Chinese are about to show the Americans how you do Cancel Culture like a house on fire like only China can, given the fact that it is a lot further along in the “Socialism with Chinese Characteristics” evolutionary timeline than the American DNC currently is (though they are hoping to catch up as soon as possible and China is their model).

In America, for instance, the police are not called Uncle and Chairman Xi cannot on a whim decide to totally revamp the state education curriculum to reflect his socio-cultural will. We have pesky Constitutional restrictions that, while never fully stopping the state from abusing our rights, slows it down and forces it to do so more covertly than China needs to worry about.

Chairman Xi is working to cut off the power from all of his potential rivals from within, and that means making sure all centers of power in his land gravitate around his specifical regulatory will. The entertainment industry is seeing some of its stars now randomly disappear, and even less visibly, so too are its fans disappearing as Chairman Xi attempts to reconfigure the power of entertinament to gravitate around his very immediately felt power.

How envious must be the DNC to see their inspiration, the CCP, working so efficiently to sanitize life to fit within the dreams of one central head? How ambitious must be the most powerful in that group imagining maybe someday THEY will be the last head floating in the Game of Thrones Highlander Series known as American politics in current year?

The only thing missing from the DNC operation to transform the US into a China is a strong leader who isn’t distracted by sniffing the hair of young people.

See below for the “model” soon to be used here if the DNC totalitarians get their way…

Celebrity Culture “Clean Up” Campaign Targets Stars and Fans Alike

From chinadigitaltimes.net
2021-08-28 05:52:57
Joseph Brouwer
Excerpt:

One of China’s most famous actresses has been summarily wiped from the internet as part of a “clean up” campaign aimed at celebrity culture. Zhao Wei, who starred in the über-popular TV drama “My Fair Princess,” became a billionaire through investing in Alibaba, and was the face of Italian high fashion brand Fendi in China, was digitally disappeared overnight without explanation. Her erasure happened in the middle of a Cyberspace Administration of China “special operation” against celebrity worship, which has both targeted celebrity misbehavior and imposed strict new controls on fan interaction with “idols”:

In June the office of the central cyberspace affairs commission announced a two-month special operation targeting fanclub culture, known as fan quan, which it said negatively affected the mental health of children.

[…] The 10-point list “to rectify chaos in the fan community” also included an order to “strictly regulate” celebrity managers and firms…

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The Race to Replace Merkel Officially Begins

The candidates vying to replace current German Prime Minister Angela Merkel met this past weekend to take part in a public debate.  This was the first time the major candidates faced each other on the same stage.

German chancellor candidates face off in 1st election debate

From news.yahoo.com
2021-08-29 18:02:32

Excerpt:

 

BERLIN (AP) — The three candidates to succeed Chancellor Angela Merkel in Germany’s election meet Sunday evening in a televised debate, with polls showing their parties close together and suggesting that many voters are unimpressed with the choices.

Sunday’s debate on RTL and n-tv private television is the first of three ahead of the parliamentary election on Sept. 26. The contenders are Armin Laschet for Merkel’s center-right Union bloc, Olaf Scholz for the center-left Social Democrats and Annalena Baerbock for the environmentalist Greens.

Laschet is the governor of Germany’s most populous state, North Rhine-Westphalia. Scholz is the vice chancellor and finance minister in Merkel’s outgoing coalition government. Baerbock, who lacks government experience, is making the Greens’ first run for the chancellery.

Recent polls show no party forecast to receive more than a quarter of the vote, a particularly disappointing situation for the Union after Merkel’s 16 years in government. The…

 

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China Ready to Fuel Cuban Socialist Renaissance

China is attempting to take the place of what was once the Soviet Union for Cuba, a world power able to offer trade, military aid and support right in the backyard of the United States of America.

Xi says China willing to work together with Cuba in building socialism

From eng.chinamil.com.cn
2021-08-30 14:37:02

Excerpt:

 

President Xi Jinping talked with Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel and Ecuadorian President Guillermo Lasso over the phone on Monday.

President Xi said Monday that China is willing to walk together with Cuba in building socialism and be good partners in pursuing common development in a phone conversation with Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel.

Xi also said China is willing to join hands with Cuba in being good exemplars of anti-COVID-19 fight and good comrades in strategic coordination.

In their talks, Diaz-Canel conveyed Comrade Raul Castro’s sincere greetings to Xi, and briefed Xi on the recent domestic situation in Cuba. Xi asked Diaz-Canel to convey his cordial greetings to Comrade Raul Castro.

 

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Women of Afghanistan Already Being Oppressed by Taliban

The women left behind in Afghanistan are not willing to stop fighting for basic human rights, and the Taliban appears already set to oppress the women of this land under their militant version of Islam.

The Taliban said women wouldn’t face discrimination. They already are

From rss.cnn.com
2021-08-29 13:43:00

Excerpt:

As many women are trying to leave Afghanistan, others are staying behind despite the Taliban’s history of denying women’s basic rights. CNN’s Anna Coren speaks to two individuals who are fighting for the rights of those who remain.

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