Wednesday, April 06, 2022

Russian Teacher ‘Shocked’ as She Faces Jail over Anti-war Speech Pupils Taped

THE GUARDIAN: Fears of ‘Stalinisation’ of society after Irina Gen was called in by spy agency and prosecuted over recorded message

Irina Gen voiced her disapproval of the way Russian state media framed the bombing of a maternity hospital in the besieged city of Mariupol

When Irina Gen, a 55-year-old English and German language teacher in the Russian city of Penza, embarked on an anti-war speech in her classroom, little did she know she was being recorded by her own students.

“I just wanted to broaden my students’ worldview. I hoped to break through the propaganda that is being fed to this country. But look where it got me,” said Gen, who faces a long-term prison sentence for “discrediting” the Russian army after her message went viral.

On 18 March, Gen’s 13- and 14-year-old students asked her why Russian athletes were banned from participating in international competitions – a decision by the west that she said she tried to put in context.

“Until Russia starts to behave in a civilised manner, the non-admission of Russian athletes to competitions will continue forever … I think that is correct,” she said in the audio, which was first shared by Kremlin-linked Telegram channels. “Russia wanted to reach Kyiv and overthrow the government! Ukraine is, in fact, a sovereign state, there is a sovereign government … We are living in a totalitarian regime. Any dissent is considered a crime.” Gen also voiced her disapproval of the way Russian state media framed the bombing of a maternity hospital in the besieged city of Mariupol as a Ukrainian-style provocation. » | Pjotr Sauer | Wednesday, April 6, 2022

Putin gegen die Welt | Biografie | ZDFzeit Doku

Mar 13, 2022 • Putin gegen die Welt | Die Biografie | ZDFzeit Doku Zwischen Kanzler-Kumpel und Kaltem Krieger: Wladimir Putin hat eine enge, aber komplizierte Beziehung zu Deutschland. Er schätzt Land und Leute, viele westliche Werte aber lehnt er ab. Dass der russische Präsident eine besondere Nähe zu den Deutschen verspürt, gehört zu den Gründungsmythen seiner Präsidentschaft. Er selbst hat kräftig daran geschraubt. Doch heute sind die beiden Länder so zerstritten wie lange nicht mehr.

Wer trägt Schuld an der erkalteten Beziehung? In dieser Frage sind die Deutschen gespalten, es scheint fast eine Glaubenssache. Die einen sind überzeugt: Tief im Herzen ist Putin eigentlich ein Verbündeter, der vom Westen nur provoziert wird. Die anderen sehen in Putin einen machthungrigen Autokraten, der Kriege anzettelt und Demokratien untergräbt. Unstrittig ist: Deutschland und Präsident Putin haben eine lange gemeinsame Vergangenheit. Er hat in der DDR gelebt und gearbeitet, spricht gut Deutsch und schätzt das Bier und die deutsche Pünktlichkeit.

Bei seinem Antrittsbesuch als russischer Präsident beeindruckt Putin 2001 die Abgeordneten des Bundestags mit jungenhaftem Charme und einer versöhnlichen Rede auf Deutsch, in der er das Ende des Kalten Krieges, mehr Demokratie für Russland und eine Annäherung an Europa verkündet. Viele Deutsche sehen seine Heimat- und Naturverbundenheit, seine Sportbegeisterung und seine hemdsärmelige Art mit Sympathie. Auch seine Geheimdienstzeit in Dresden und sein Engagement für enge deutsch-russische Wirtschaftsbeziehungen werden als Belege für seine Deutschland-Sympathie gewertet.

Doch für viele andere Deutsche sind die Träume einer engen deutsch-russischen Freundschaft inzwischen geplatzt. Für sie lautet die ernüchternde Bilanz: Putin kann mit den freien Demokratien des Westens nichts anfangen. Im Gegenteil, er sieht sie als Gefahr für seine Macht und unterstützt deshalb aktiv die Gegner liberaler Gesellschaften. Er nimmt keine Rücksicht auf westliche Werte, krempelt Russland zu einem autoritären Staat um und baut mit aggressiver Außenpolitik ein Gegengewicht zum Westen auf.

"ZDFzeit" taucht ein in die schillernde Biografie Wladimir Putins und analysiert, wie er es wirklich mit den Deutschen hält. Der Film stellt die unterschiedlichen Sichtweisen auf Wladimir Putin vor. Alte Weggefährten und Zeitzeugen kommen zu Wort, Spitzenpolitiker diskutieren die Frage, welcher Umgang mit Putin der richtige ist. Muss Russland weiter mit Sanktionen belegt werden, oder ist deren Abbau das Gebot der Stunde? Russische Insider wie Putins Spindoktor Gleb Pawlowski, die Präsidentschaftskandidatin Xenija Sobtschak und der erzkonservative Kreml-Vordenker Konstantin Malofejew ergänzen das Bild um die russische Perspektive auf die Entwicklung der Beziehungen zwischen Putin und den Deutschen.


Democracy Now! US News & World Headlines – April 6, 2022

W5: The Mind-boggling Wealth and Privilege of Russian Oligarchs

Apr 3, 2022 • W5 takes an in-depth look into who Russia's oligarchs are, and whether sanctioning them would stop President Vladimir Putin's invasion in Ukraine.


From Marylebone to Caribbean: wealth of Abramovich’s business partners revealed: Exclusive: Documents seen by Guardian show empire of Russian steel barons Alexander Abramov and Aleksandr Frolov »

Why Tracking Putin’s Wealth Is So Difficult: Amid speculation that oligarchs are holding cash and luxury assets for the Russian president, many of his extravagances can be traced elsewhere: the Russian state. »

Waffenlieferungen und Sanktionen – was ist Ihr Plan, Herr Bundeskanzler?

6.4.2022 – Die Gräueltaten von Butscha haben die Forderungen nach härteren Sanktionen gegen Russland noch verschärft. Im Parlament stellt sich Bundeskanzler Olaf Scholz nun den Fragen der Abgeordneten. Jetzt im Livestream.

Autocracy Intensifies in Europe | The Mehdi Hasan Show

Apr 5, 2022 • The far-right leader of Hungary, Putin-ally Viktor Orbán, just secured a fourth term. Mehdi discusses his reelection with Trump-Ukraine whistleblower Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, the former director for European Affairs at the National Security Council.

Fmr. Treasury Sec. Summers on Sanctions: “The West Has Cowered and Dithered” | Amanpour and Company

Apr 5, 2022 • Amid inflation, the war in Ukraine, and a lingering pandemic, economists are warning of an impending recession. To explain, former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers speaks with Walter Isaacson about the global economy and where matters might go from here. Originally aired on April 5, 2022

Ukraine: Bucha Atrocities Draw International Condemnation | DW News

Apr 4, 2022 • WARNING: Graphic Content

Twitter Moves to Limit Russian Government Accounts

AFP

BBC: Twitter has limited content from more than 300 official Russian government accounts, including that of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The accounts will no longer be recommended in timelines, notifications or elsewhere on the site, Twitter said.

The company said it would take action against any country which "restricts access to the open internet while they're engaged in armed conflict".

The platform has been severely limited in Russia since war began in Ukraine .

Currently Putin has two official accounts on the social media site: one in Russian and one in English. They have 3.6 million and 1.7 million followers respectively.

Twitter said allowing Russian government officials to post freely on the social media site, whilst simultaneously limiting the platform in Russia "creates a harmful information imbalance". » | ames Clayton, North America technology reporter | Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Ukraine War: Chanel Restricts Sales of Goods to Russians Abroad

Models at a Chanel fashion show in Paris | GETTY IMAGES

BBC: French luxury giant Chanel has stopped selling its products to people who intend to take them to Russia, after shutting its stores in the country.

Moscow and some customers have accused the firm of being anti-Russian, and threatened to boycott the brand.

Chanel says it is just complying with European Union (EU) sanctions, which ban the sale to Russia of luxury goods priced at more than €300 ($327; £250).

Many Western firms halted operations in Russia after the Ukraine war started.

Chanel told the BBC that sanctions, imposed by the EU, as well as Switzerland, also prohibit the sale of luxury items to individuals who intend to use them in Russia.

The company said it "complies with all laws applicable to our operations and employees worldwide, including trade sanction laws".

"This is why we have rolled out a process to ask clients for whom we do not know the main residency to confirm that the items they are purchasing will not be used in Russia," Chanel said in a statement. » | BBC | Wednesday, April 6, 2022

Tuesday, April 05, 2022

La vie sans amour est réservée aux types secs et sobres !

Das Leben ohne Liebe ist nur für trockene und nüchterne Typen geeignet! / Life without love is only for dry and sobre types!

Un grand merci à Catalyst Wedding Co. sur Pinterest pour cette superbe photo.

Bei kaltem Wetter, gibt es nichts Eleganteres als einen Cape zu tragen! Elegant und salopp.

Par temps froid, rien de plus élégant que de porter une cape ! Élégant et décontracté. / In cold weather, there's nothing more elegant than wearing a cape! Elegant and casual.

Für dieses schöne Bild, bedanke ich mich bei Chashko Mhv auf Pinterest.

Stefan Aust: Ukraine-Krieg? "Wahnsinnig gefährlich! Dann stehen wir vor dem dritten Weltkrieg!"

Apr 5, 2022 • Auf die Invasion Russlands in die Ukraine hat der Westen mit scharfen Sanktionen reagiert. Doch Frieden ist weiter nicht in Sicht. Mehr als fünf Wochen Krieg in der Ukraine - die Kämpfe dauern an. Auf der Flucht vor den russischen Truppen haben Millionen Menschen das Land verlassen. WELT AM SONNTAG-Herausgeber Stefan Aust spricht im Interview über die aktuelle Situation.


WIKIPEDIA: Stefan Aust [D].

Stefan Aust [E].

Prime Minister Speaks Directly to Russian People: 'You Deserve the Facts'

Apr 5, 2022 • Boris Johnson has addressed the Russian people in their own language, telling them they "deserve the truth" and "deserve the facts".

Céline Dion : My Heart Will Go On

Views on YouTube: 196,786,307

CALLEkocht : Lammragout zu Ostern. Wenige Zutaten - einfach - lecker

Mar 25, 2022 • CALLEkocht: So magst auch Du Lamm!!! Lammgulasch oder Lammragout aus dem Lammkeule. Langsam geschmort mit Zwiebeln und Knoblauch. Dazu frische Pilze und fertig ist das perfekte Essen für Ostern.


Zutaten:

1 Lammkeule
6 Zwiebeln
4 Knoblauchzehen
3 EL Oregano
3 EL Paprikapulver
2 EL Tomatenmark
2 EL Pflanzenöl
Salz und Pfeffer
Trockener Rotwein
400 g Champignons

How the Royal Family Is Changing before Our Very Eyes

Das Grauen von Butscha: »Ich weiß nicht, wie ich das beschreiben soll« | SPIEGEL TV

Apr 5, 2022 • Alexander ist ehemaliger Scharfschütze der ukrainischen Armee. Nach dem Überfall der Russen meldete er sich freiwillig zum Dienst an der Front. Jetzt hat er SPIEGEL TV durch die zerstörten Städte Butscha und Irpin geführt.

Kremlin Propaganda Shields Russians from Horrors of Ukraine Invasion

Apr 5, 2022 • NBC News' Ken Dilanian reports on how Russian news propaganda is shielding residents from the horrors of the invasion of Ukraine.

Democracy Now! US News & World Headlines – April 5, 2022

Is This the End for Gay Conversion Therapy? – Newsnight | 2015

The 'Culture War' of Gay Conversion Therapy - Victoria Derbyshire

Apr 23, 2015 • Gay conversion therapy is a fiercely-contested topic - advocates claim it's not harmful but it's been condemned by UK health organisations. BBC's Benjamin Zand gained exclusive access to a seminar in London which looked at controversial gay conversion therapies. There had been calls for the conference, which was billed as "exploring unwanted same-sex attractions", to be banned - with campaigners saying there should be no place in the UK for people to teach that being gay is something that's wrong and should be cured. Earlier this month President Obama called for an end to 'gay conversion therapies' in the States.

In the UK - gay conversion is NOT illegal - but various health organisations - including NHS England and the Royal College of Psychiatrists - describe the treatment as "potentially harmful and unethical". So should it be banned?


EU-Kommission geht wegen Verstössen gegen die Rechtsstaatlichkeit gegen Ungarn vor

NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: Ungarn kassiert jährlich Milliarden aus dem EU-Haushalt. Aber geht das Land auch anständig mit dem Geld um? Die EU-Kommission meint Nein.

Der ungarische Ministerpräsident Viktor Orban und EU-Kommissionspräsidentin Ursula von der Leyen in einer Aufnahme von 2020. | Francois Lenoir / Reuters

(dpa) Ungarn muss sich wegen möglicher Verstösse gegen die Rechtsstaatlichkeit als erstes Land einem Verfahren zur Kürzung von EU-Mitteln stellen. EU-Kommissionspräsidentin Ursula von der Leyen kündigte am Dienstag im Strassburger Europaparlament an, dass ihre Behörde den ersten Schritt des sogenannten Rechtsstaatsmechanismus unternehmen werde. Darüber habe die EU-Kommission die ungarischen Behörden am Dienstag informiert. » | dpa | Dienstag, 5. April 2022

L'UE lance contre Budapest la procédure liant fonds européens et respect de l'État de droit : La procédure inédite permet de suspendre le versement de fonds européens en cas de violation des principes de l'État de droit. Utilisée pour la première fois, elle vise la Hongrie. »

Ukraine War: Zelenskyy Tells UN Security Council Russians Must Face War Crimes Trial

Apr 5, 2022 • Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has told the UN Security Council that Russians who are implicated in suspected war crimes in Ukraine must face justice.

Speaking via video link, he said Russia must be punished as “an example” to other countries who broke international law.

He also told delegates that Moscow was trying to turn Ukraine into a nation of “silent slaves”


Total Wealth of World’s Billionaires Has Fallen to $12.7tn, Says Forbes

THE GUARDIAN: Number of billionaires worldwide falls by 329 amid Russian sanctions, according to Forbes

The total wealth of the world’s billionaires has dipped from a record high last year amid a drop in global stock markets since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, despite the planet’s richest people still holding a combined $12.7tn (£9.7tn) in assets.

According to the annual Forbes magazine ranking of the world richest people, the number of billionaires worldwide fell by 329 to 2,668, with the total value of their combined assets falling slightly from $13.1tn on the 2021 list.

It said that Putin’s invasion of Ukraine – and the avalanche of sanctions that followed – sent the Russian stock market and the rouble plummeting, resulting in 34 fewer Russian billionaires on the list. Those from the country with billionaire status almost all saw their fortunes stagnate or decline, with their total wealth dropping by more than $260bn compared with a year earlier.

Forbes said the decline in the total number of billionaires from 2,755 to 2,668 was the largest since the 2009 financial crisis, but followed an increase of more than 600 in 2021 when global stock bounced back from pandemic lows.

Elon Musk, the maverick boss of Tesla and SpaceX, was named the world’s richest man for the first time with a $219bn fortune, up $68bn on the previous year because of the carmaker’s soaring share price.

Musk leapfrogged Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, whose fortune dropped to $171bn after a small decline in the company’s share price and donations to charity. Bezos’s estimated $1.5bn charitable gifts pale in comparison with his ex-wife MacKenzie Scott, who has given away $12.5bn to more than 1,250 organisations in less than two years. Scott, who collected a $38bn settlement in her divorce from Bezos in 2019, has fallen from the 22nd-richest person on the planet to the 30th with a $43.6bn fortune. » | Rupert Neate | Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Hungary Election: Viktor Orban's Victory Hailed by Putin

Moment Hungary PM makes dig at President Zelensky in victory speech. | Screenshot from the accompanying BBC video.

BBC: Hungary's nationalist Prime Minister Viktor Orban has been congratulated by Russian President Vladimir Putin after he won a fourth term by a landslide in the country's general election.

His right-wing Fidesz party had 53% of votes with almost 99% counted.

The opposition alliance led by Peter Marki-Zay was far behind with 35%.

The Kremlin says Mr Putin expressed confidence that the two countries could develop further ties "despite the difficult international situation".

In his victory speech, Mr Orban criticised Brussels bureaucrats and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky, calling them "opponents".

Mr Zelensky has repeatedly criticised Mr Orban's ban on the transfer of arms to Ukraine, with which it shares a border.

Based on preliminary results, the National Election Office said Fidesz would have 135 seats, a two-thirds majority, and the opposition alliance would have 56 seats.

The victory will be Fidesz's fourth successive win since 2010. With video » | BBC | Monday, April 4, 2022

Putins tschetschenischer Vollstrecker

Ramsan Kadyrow vor 10.000 Soldaten Ende März 2022 in Grosny Tschetschenien | Bild: AP

RAMSAN KADYROW

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Der Herrscher Tschetscheniens gibt sich als treuester Krieger des russischen Präsidenten. Seine Kämpfer gelten als besonders grausam und sollen auch in Butscha im Einsatz gewesen sein.

Ramsan Kadyrow hat sich einst als Wladimir Putins „Fußsoldat“ bezeichnet. Im Ukrainekrieg gibt der Herrscher der Nordkaukasus-Teilrepublik Tschetschenien mit seinen als „Kadyrowzy“ gefürchteten Kämpfern immer mehr den Chef einer Prätorianergarde, der Befehle des russischen Präsidenten auch gegen Abweichler aus eigenen Reihen schützt. » | Von Friedrich Schmidt | Dienstag, 5. April 2022

«Les soldats russes violaient sauvagement les femmes après avoir tué les hommes»: le récit de notre envoyée spéciale à Kiev

Le président ukrainien, Volodymyr Zelensky, s’est rendu, lundi, dans la ville de Boutcha, où il a dénoncé «des crimes de guerre qui seront reconnus par le monde comme un génocide». RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP

LE FIGARO : REPORTAGE - Boutcha, Irpin et Hostomel, au nord de Kiev, épicentres des exactions de l’armée russe.

Envoyée spéciale à Kiev

En près de dix ans de métier, Kateryna Haliant n’avait jamais pleuré après une consultation. «C’est parce qu’on ne m’avait jamais raconté l’enfer», dit-elle. Cette psychologue clinicienne est l’une des quelques professionnels qui ont choisi de recevoir en consultation, gratuitement et de manière anonyme, des jeunes filles et des femmes affirmant avoir été violées par des militaires russes dans des territoires que ces derniers occupaient.

Les histoires se ressemblent, «comme si les Russes avaient planifié tout cela», juge Kateryna Haliant. «D’abord, le matin ou l’après-midi, les soldats vérifiaient qui vivait dans les maisons. Puis ils revenaient le soir, tuaient les éventuels hommes du foyer, pillaient l’argent et les objets précieux. Ils mangeaient et buvaient ce qu’ils trouvaient dans la maison et, quand ils étaient saouls, ils violaient les filles et les femmes. Même en présence d’enfants», raconte-t-elle, précisant que dans quasiment tous les cas connus par elle et ses collègues il s’agit de viols en réunion commis par des hommes de tous âges. » | Par Margaux Benn | lundi 4 avril 2022

Réservé aux abonnés

Putins Jünger: Russland-Demo in Berlin | SPIEGEL TV

Apr 5, 2022 • Während die Bilder von den Kriegsverbrechen in Butscha um die Welt gehen, marschieren in Berlin Kreml-Anhänger durch die Stadt. Worte wie Angriffskrieg wollten die Demonstranten nicht in den Mund nehmen. Einblicke in ein Parallel-Universum.

En Suède, affluence record de volontaires sous contrat avec l’armée

REBECKA UHLIN POUR « LE MONDE »

LE MONDE : FACTUEL| Ces trois derniers mois, et particulièrement depuis le début de la guerre en Ukraine, le nombre de civils inscrits pour entrer dans la défense territoriale a explosé. Il faudrait remonter à 1940 pour voir pareil engouement.

En uniforme, un groupe de soldats casqués surgit d’un bosquet. Au signal de leur commandant, les militaires plongent à terre, deux par deux. L’un tient un lance-grenades antichar sur son épaule, pendant que l’autre le charge. Puis ils tirent sur une cible imaginaire et recommencent, jusqu’à ce qu’ils reçoivent l’ordre de battre en retraite. « L’objectif de l’exercice aujourd’hui est d’acquérir des réflexes », apprécie le lieutenant Carl-Johan Nyberg, chef de la défense territoriale de Scanie, dans le sud de la Suède.

En face de lui se tiennent une vingtaine d’hommes et une femme. Tous sont volontaires. Membres de « hemvärnet », la défense territoriale suédoise, ils passent ce premier week-end d’avril sur le champ de tir du régiment du sud de la Suède, à Rinkaby. En plus de se familiariser avec le lance-grenades, c’est aussi l’occasion, pour les derniers arrivés, de faire plus ample connaissance avec leurs compagnons de bataillon. » | Par Anne-Françoise Hivert (Rinkaby (Suède), envoyée spéciale ) | mardi 5 avril 2022

Réservé à aux abonnés

It’s Time to Confront the Trump-Putin Network

THE GUARDIAN – OPINION: A stunning number of Trump’s closest associates had deep ties to the Kremlin. The significance of this cannot be overstated

The most striking role of the Russian government in the 2016 US election was its many, many ties with the Trump campaign.’ Photograph: Joe Marino/UPI/Rex/Shutterstock

In 2014, the Putin regime invaded Ukraine’s Crimea. In 2016, the same regime invaded the United States. The former took place as a conventional military operation; the latter was a spectacular case of cyberwarfare, including disinformation that it was happening at all and promulgation of a lot of talking points still devoutly repeated by many. It was a vast social-media influencing project that took many forms as it sought to sow discord and confusion, even attempting to dissuade Black voters from voting.

Additionally, Russian intelligence targeted voter rolls in all 50 states, which is not thought to have had consequences, but demonstrated the reach and ambition of online interference. This weekend, British investigative journalist Carole Cadwalladr said on Twitter, “We failed to acknowledge Russia had staged a military attack on the West. We called it ‘meddling.’ We used words like ‘interference.’ It wasn’t. It was warfare. We’ve been under military attack for eight years now.”

As she notes, Putin’s minions were not only directing their attention to the United States, and included pro-Brexit efforts and support for France’s far-right racist National Front party. The US interference – you could call it cyberwarfare, or informational invasion – took many forms. Stunningly, a number of left-wing news sources and pundits devoted themselves to denying the reality of the intervention and calling those who were hostile to the Putin regime cold-war red-scare right-wingers, as if contemporary Russia was a glorious socialist republic rather than a country ruled by a dictatorial ex-KGB agent with a record of murdering journalists, imprisoning dissenters, embezzling tens of billions and leading a global neofascist white supremacist revival. In discrediting the news stories and attacking critics of the Russian government, they provided crucial cover for Trump. In her 2019 testimony… » | Rebecca Solnit | Wednesday, March 2, 2022

Eventhough this excellent article is a month or so old, I am posting it because it is very insightful and, in my opinion, a must read. It is particularly relevant for the French with their upcoming presidential elections, and of course for Americans, especially for Republicans who have great affection for Donald Trump! – Mark

North Korea Would ‘Annihilate’ South If Provoked, Warns Kim Jong-un’s Sister

THE GUARDIAN: Warning points to a rise in tensions on the peninsula after the North conducted its first intercontinental ballistic missile test in five years

Kim Yo-jong, the influential sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, seen here in 2018 speaking to former South Korean president Moon Jae-in. Kim berated Seoul for the second time in days. Photograph: Bae Jae-man/AP

The influential sister of North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, has said the country’s nuclear forces would “annihilate” the South Korean military if it launched a pre-emptive strike against the regime.

Kim Yo-jong, who holds several senior positions in the government and ruling party, said the North had no intention of starting a second Korean war, but would respond if provoked and leave the South’s military in a state of “total destruction and ruin”.

Her comments after South Korea’s defence minister, Suh Wook, publicly discussed Seoul’s ability to “accurately and quickly hit any target in North Korea” with a range of weapons, as international unease grows over the North’s recent resumption of long-range missile tests. In another statement directed toward Suh on Sunday, she called him a “scum-like guy”. » | Justin McCurry in Tokyo and agencies | Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Monday, April 04, 2022

Thomas Piketty Thinks America Is Primed for Wealth Redistribution


THE NEW YORK TIMES: In 2013, the French economist Thomas Piketty, in his best seller “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” a book eagerly received in the wake of the 2008 economic collapse, put forth the notion that returns on capital historically outstrip economic growth (his famous r>g formula). The upshot? The rich get richer, while the rest of us stay stuck in the mud. Now, nearly a decade later, Piketty is set to publish “A Brief History of Equality,” in which he argues that we’re on a trajectory of greater, not less, equality and lays out his prescriptions for remedying our current corrosive wealth disparities. (In short: Tax the rich.) If the line from one book to the other looks slightly askew given the state of the world, then, Piketty suggests, you’re looking from the wrong vantage point. “I am relatively optimistic,” says Piketty, who is 50, “about the fact that there is a long-run movement toward more equality, which goes beyond the little details of what happens within a specific decade.” » | David Marchese | Photograph: Christopher Anderson/Magnum, for The New York Times | Friday, April 1, 2022

'Murderers, Torturers, Rapists': Zelensky Accuses Russia of ‘War Crimes’ Near Kyiv

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in an address called the actions of the Russian military "war crimes", following reports of atrocities allegedly committed by the Russian forces in Bucha, near Kyiv.

Experts believe the violence was premeditated, consistent with Russian methods in past wars such as Chechnya, where brutalising civilians was seen as an effective method of crushing resistance.

After Kyiv sleeper suburb Bucha was liberated after being under siege for a month, those entering over the weekend found scenes from a horror movie that for local residents had been their final inescapable reality.


Anne Applebaum: Autocracies Don’t Believe in Rules or Norms | Amanpour and Company

Apr 1, 2022 • Anne Applebaum is a staff writer for The Atlantic and a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian. Her latest article, "There Is No Liberal World Order," argues that unless democracies defend themselves together, the forces of autocracy will destroy them. She joins Michel Martin to discuss this existential struggle. Originally aired on April 1, 2022

«Wir kämpfen aus Liebe, nicht aus Hass» – wie der russische Staat den Krieg in der Ukraine zu legitimieren versucht

NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: Offiziell wird der russischen Öffentlichkeit ein unvollständiges Bild der «Militäroperation» in der Ukraine gezeigt. Der Versuch, Kriegseuphorie zu schüren, gelingt nur bedingt. Aber die Ideologie der Gewalt treibt einen Keil in die Gesellschaft.

Wladimir Putin tritt am 18. März an einem Konzert im Moskauer Luschniki-Stadion zur Feier des achten Jahrestags der Krim-«Rückholung» auf. Auch die «Militäroperation» in der Ukraine wird bejubelt. | Sergei Guneyev / Sputnik Pool / EPA

Seit mehr als fünf Wochen führt Russland einen Krieg gegen die Ukraine, der nicht «Krieg» heissen darf. «Militärische Spezialoperation zum Schutz der friedlichen Bürger im Donbass» ist der offizielle Name, der verbirgt, worum es sich eigentlich handelt: um einen Angriff auf das ganze Nachbarland, dessen Bevölkerung Wladimir Putin selbst als zum russischen Volk gehörig beschrieb. Die Verdrehung der Tatsachen ist kein Versehen und keine Relativierung. Die gesamte staatliche Propaganda über das Geschehen in der Ukraine trägt Orwellsche Züge. Sie ist ein Lügengebilde, das einen brutalen Krieg legitimieren soll.

Kampf gegen das Böse

Mit dem Donbass ist eigentlich die Ukraine gemeint, mit Militäroperation Krieg, und dieser ist nach russischer Lesart auch nur da, um den Frieden und die Freiheit zu bringen. Er sei Russland vom Westen, von den USA, «aufgezwungen» worden. Unter «Entnazifizierung» versteht Putin den Sturz der Regierung in Kiew und eine Art Säuberungswelle in der ukrainischen Gesellschaft; unter «Entmilitarisierung» die Zerschlagung und Unterwerfung des Landes. » | Markus Ackeret, Moskau | Montag, 4. April 2022

Orbán’s Victory in Hungary Adds to the Darkness Engulfing Europe

THE GUARDIAN: The pro-Putin nationalist managed to turn the war in Ukraine to his advantage in a win that deepens the EU’s troubles

Orbán won by telling Hungarians he would keep them out of this war, and that their bills would stay low due to his sweet gas deals with Putin.’ Photograph: Attila Kisbenedek/AFP/Getty Images

As I stood in a cold, disconsolate crowd in central Budapest late on Sunday night, listening to Hungarian opposition leader Péter Márki-Zay concede defeat in the country’s election, the Twitter feed on my phone filled with images of murdered Ukrainian civilians in the town of Bucha. Some of them had their hands tied behind their backs. Beside one murdered woman lay a keychain with a pendant showing the yellow stars on blue background of the European flag. The Ukrainian horrors are clearly far worse than the Hungarian miseries, but the two are fatefully connected.

It is a bitter irony that, just as we learn of some of the worst atrocities in Russian president Vladimir Putin’s war of terror against Ukraine, Putin’s closest ally among EU leaders, Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán, is re-elected partly because he turned that very war to his own political benefit. As well as exploiting all the advantages he has already built in to a heavily rigged political system, such as gerrymandered constituencies and overwhelming media dominance, Orbán won by telling Hungarians that he would keep them out of this war – and that their heating bills would stay low due to his sweet gas deals with Putin.

In his victory speech, the Hungarian leader listed the “opponents” he had defeated. They included the international media, Brussels bureaucrats and the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, who has criticised him fiercely for his opposition to the weapon supplies and further sanctions that Ukraine desperately needs. So he tells us exactly who his enemies are – and friend Putin has hastened to congratulate him on his famous victory.

If the Hungarian six-party opposition coalition led by Márki-Zay had won, Hungary would have become a staunch western ally in the face of Russian aggression, as other central European countries such as Poland and the Czech Republic are proving to be. “Russians go home!” some youngsters chanted at the very end of that disconsolate opposition wake in Budapest, recalling a slogan from the time of the Soviet invasion of Hungary in 1956. Walking back at midnight across a deserted Heroes Square, I recalled how in that very place in June 1989 I had heard a young, seemingly idealistic Orbán himself call for the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Hungary. Yet now the ageing cynic is flatly refusing to let western arms supplies pass through Hungary in order to help the Ukrainian army send the Russians home. I wonder what he sees when he looks in the mirror. » | Timothy Garton Ash* | Monday, April 4, 2022

* Timothy Garton Ash is a historian, political writer and Guardian columnist

Biden Calls for Putin to Face War Crimes Trial over Civilian Killings in Ukraine

THE GUARDIAN: Western leaders prepare fresh round of sanctions against Moscow amid outrage over reports of killings in town of Bucha, near Kyiv

Joe Biden has called for Vladimir Putin to be tried for war crimes as western leaders prepared a fresh round of economic sanctions against Moscow amid mounting global outrage over claims of civilian killings by Russian soldiers in Ukraine.

The US president was responding to harrowing images broadcast around the world after the discovery over the weekend of a mass grave and bodies in civilian clothes, some with their hands bound, in the town of Bucha, near Kyiv.

“You may remember I got criticised for calling Putin a war criminal,” Biden told reporters at the Fort McNair army post in Washington. “Well, the truth of the matter – we saw it happen in Bucha – he is a war criminal.” With video » | Jon Henley and David Smith in Washington | Monday, April 4, 2022

Alan Turing: The Scientist Who Saved the Allies | Man Who Cracked the Nazi Code | Timeline

Mar 22, 2022 • During the Second World War, the allies' key objective was to crack the German army's encrypted communications code. Without a doubt, the key player in this game was Alan Turing, an interdisciplinary scientist and a long-forgotten hero.


Timeline is like Netflix for history... Sign up to History Hit, the world's best history documentary service, and get 50% off by using the code 'TIMELINE' here.

Democracy Now! US News & World Headlines – April 4, 2022

Elon Musk devient le premier actionnaire de Twitter

LE MONDE : Le milliardaire a racheté plus de 9 % des actions du réseau social, où il est l’une des personnalités les plus suivies.

Le PDG de Tesla et de SpaceX, Elon Musk, est désormais le premier actionnaire du réseau social Twitter. Des documents publiés le 4 avril par le régulateur de la Bourse américaine montrent que M. Musk a acquis 9,2 % des actions du réseau social, pour une valeur d’environ 2,9 milliards de dollars (2,62 milliards d’euros). Ce rachat, effectué le 14 mars en toute discrétion par le multimilliardaire, a créé la surprise – la valeur de l’action Twitter grimpait d’environ 25 % lundi, avant l’ouverture de la Bourse de New York.

M. Musk, très actif sur Twitter, est l’une des personnalités les influentes sur le réseau social – avec 80 millions d’abonnés, son compte figure parmi les dix plus suivis. Les messages, souvent moqueurs, parfois cryptiques qu’il y publie peuvent entraîner des fluctuations majeures dans le cours d’une action ou d’une cryptomonnaie. » | Par Damien Leloup et Alexandre Piquard | lundi 4 avril 2022

Elon Musk’s $2.9bn stake in Twitter comes with few upsides: The Tesla boss could lose focus on the electric car revolution if he gets sucked into disputes over social media and free speech »

French Election Opens Up as Marine Le Pen Surges

THE NEW YORK TIMES: President Emmanuel Macron’s belated entry into the campaign and his focus on Ukraine have left him vulnerable to a strong challenge from the right.

PARIS — At last, Emmanuel Macron stepped forth. The French president entered a vast arena this weekend, plunged into darkness and lit only by spotlights and glow sticks, before a crowd of 30,000 supporters in a domed stadium in the Paris suburbs.

It was a highly choreographed appearance — his first campaign rally for an election now less than a week away — with something of the air of a rock concert. But Mr. Macron had come to sound an alarm.

Do not think “it’s all decided, that it’s all going to go well,” he told the crowd, a belated acknowledgment that a presidential election that had seemed almost certain to return him to power is suddenly wide open.

The diplomatic attempt to end the war in Ukraine has been time-consuming for Mr. Macron, so much so that he has had little time for the French election, only to awaken to the growing danger that France could lurch to the anti-immigrant right, with its Moscow-friendly politics and its skepticism of NATO.

Marine Le Pen, the hard-right leader making her third attempt to gain power, has surged over the past couple of weeks, as her patient focus on cost-of-living issues has resonated with the millions of French people struggling to make ends meet after an increase of more than 35 percent in gas prices over the past year. » | Roger Cohen | Monday, April 4, 2022

The Observer view on the French election and rightwing populism: Emmanuel Macron is expected to win but voter support for Marine Le Pen shows the threat of the far right must be tackled »

The Putin Files : Masha Lipman | 2017


Read the transcript to this interview here.

Moldova Fears They Are Next in Putin's Firing Line

Apr 4, 2022 • The neighbouring countries of Ukraine and Moldova share much in common. Both declared independence from the Soviet Union in August 1991. And both wish for European Union membership. But unlike Ukraine, Moldova does not seek to be a part of NATO. Neutrality for Moldova means showing no ambition for joining NATO and in turn avoiding the ire of Russian President Vladimir Putin who has warned the western military alliance not to encroach on its borders. In essence, Moldova, one of Europe’s poorest countries with a population of only 2.6 million, is gambling on an avoidance strategy over a military alliance for its protection.

The Enemies of Liberalism Are Showing Us What It Really Means

Ukraine has something to say about it, too. | Lynsey Addario for The New York Times

OPINION: EZRA KLEIN

THE NEW YORK TIMES: “After three decades of dominance, liberalism is losing its hold on Western minds,” Matthew Rose writes in his powerful new book, “A World After Liberalism.

Rose does not mean liberalism in the way we typically use the word. This is not about supporting universal health care or disagreeing with Justice Samuel Alito. Rose means liberalism as in the shared assumptions of the West: a belief in human dignity, universal rights, individual flourishing and the consent of the governed.

That liberalism has been battered by financial crises, the climate crisis, checkered pandemic responses, right-wing populists and a rising China. It seems exhausted, ground down, defined by the contradictions and broken promises that follow victory rather than the creativity and aspiration that attend struggle.

At least, it did. Ukraine’s refusal to bend the knee to Vladimir Putin has reminded the West that, for those who have not yet learned to take it for granted, life under liberalism is worth fighting for. But true renewal will require more than horror at Russia’s invasion or paeans to Ukraine’s courage. It will mean grappling with liberalism’s deficiencies and rediscovering its core radicalism. » | Ezra Klein, Opinion Columnist | Sunday, April 3, 2022

Bristling Against the West, China Rallies Domestic Sympathy for Russia

THE NEW YORK TIMES: China’s Communist Party is mounting an ideological campaign aimed at officials and students. The message: The country will not turn its back on Russia.

While Russian troops have battered Ukraine, officials in China have been meeting behind closed doors to study a Communist Party-produced documentary that extols President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia as a hero.

The humiliating collapse of the Soviet Union, the video says, was the result of efforts by the United States to destroy its legitimacy. With swelling music and sunny scenes of present-day Moscow, the documentary praises Mr. Putin for restoring Stalin’s standing as a great wartime leader and for renewing patriotic pride in Russia’s past.

To the world, China casts itself as a principled onlooker of the war in Ukraine, not picking sides, simply seeking peace. At home, though, the Chinese Communist Party is pushing a campaign that paints Russia as a long-suffering victim rather than an aggressor and defends China’s strong ties with Moscow as vital.

Chinese universities have organized classes to give students a “correct understanding” of the war, often highlighting Russia’s grievances with the West. Party newspapers have run series of commentaries blaming the United States for the conflict.

Around the country, the Communist Party has organized sessions for officials to watch and discuss the history documentary. The 101 minute-long video, which was completed last year, does not mention the war in Ukraine but argues that Russia is right to worry about neighbors that broke away from the Soviet Union. It describes Mr. Putin as cleansing Russia of the political toxins that killed the Soviet Union. » | Chris Buckley | Monday, April 4, 2022

Hungary Election: PM Viktor Orban Criticises Ukraine's Zelensky as He Wins Vote


Read the article here.

Hongrie : le parti d'Orban arrive en tête des législatives : Le dirigeant souverainiste hongrois Viktor Orban a remporté dimanche une quatrième victoire d'affilée, bien plus facilement que prévu, à l'issue de législatives à l'ombre de la guerre en Ukraine. »

„Ein gewaltiger Sieg“: Viktor Orbán hat wieder eine Zweidrittelmehrheit – und verhöhnt die EU. Sein unterlegener Herausforderer ist schockiert und bezeichnet das Ergebnis als undemokratisch. »

Sunday, April 03, 2022

Prominent Gay Conversion Therapist Comes Out and Leaves Wife of 30 Years | Good Morning Britain

Feb 5, 2019 • David Matheson is a former gay conversion therapist who has recently come out as gay himself. He talks to GMB about realising his sexuality and how he was brought up as a Mormon.

To the Russian Hackers…

…with ♥️

PS: I hope you're having lots of fun! – Mark

Bee Gees : Alone

Views on YouTube: 19,396,291

Bee Gees : You Win Again

Views on YouTube: 11,470,009

To Russia with Love from the “Decadent” West.

An Russland mit Liebe aus dem „dekadenten" Westen. / À la Russie avec l'amour de l'Occident « décadent ».

With many thanks to letty ✨ on Twitter for this super photo.

Wales and Scotland Vow to Press Ahead with Trans-inclusive Conversion Therapy Bans

Wales and Scotland to press ahead with conversion therapy bans (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

PINK NEWS: The devolved governments in Wales and Scotland have expressed their commitment to banning “draconian” conversion therapy in all forms, in spite of Boris Johnson.

Johnson was widely condemned after first U-turning on plans to ban conversion therapy, before changing tack and promising that a ban would be forthcoming – though reportedly, it will now not include trans conversion therapy.

After initially stating that the government would pursue non-legislative measures against conversion therapy, a spokesperson told PinkNews on Friday (1 April): “The government has a proud record on LGBT rights, and the prime minister is committed to bringing forward legislation to ban conversion therapy.

“The content, scope and timing of the proposed bill will be confirmed in due course.” Representatives for Wales and Scotland have both released official statements affirming their commitments to banning conversion therapy in the wake of the two U-turns.

Though Scotland is not affected by Boris Johnson’s plans – the UK government had already said its ban would be for England and Wales only – a minister said in a statement that the practice has “no place in our society”.

Christina McKelvie, minister for equalities and older people, said: “Conversion practices that try to change a person’s sexuality or gender identity are harmful, discriminatory, and have no place in our society. » | Emily Chudy | Friday, April 1, 2022

The Guardian View on the Russian Orthodox Church: Betrayed by Putin’s Patriarch

THE GUARDIAN: Patriarch Kirill of Moscow has given theological cover for Vladimir Putin’s murderous assault on Ukraine

Kirill’s militant fusion of ethno-nationalism, authoritarianism and religious identity is beyond the pale.’ Photograph: AP

In 1934, as Adolf Hitler consolidated his grip on power in Germany, a courageous group of Protestant pastors resisted attempts to create a pro-Nazi unified Reich Church. In what became known as the Barmen Declaration, they asserted the absolute separation of church and state, rejecting the “false doctrine” that “the church in human arrogance could place the Word and work of the Lord in the service of any arbitrarily chosen desires, purposes, and plans”.

It is a measure of these disturbing times that last month hundreds of Orthodox Christian clergy, scholars and lay people felt the need to issue a similar declaration, excoriating the complicity of the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) in Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. Their document, entitled A Declaration on the “Russian World” Teaching, condemns Patriarch Kirill of Moscow for providing theological cover for a barbarous and illegal war.

Kirill, who had close links with the KGB in Soviet times, has described Mr Putin’s leadership as a religious miracle. As bombs have rained down on Ukrainian cities, he has asserted that it is “God’s truth” that the people of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus should be reunited as one spiritual people. During a sermon delivered in Moscow last month, he portrayed the invasion of Ukraine as part of a “metaphysical” struggle against a decadent west – a civilisation deemed to have capitulated to materialism, moral relativism, globalisation and the promotion of homosexuality. Having become a vassal of the sinful west, Ukraine must be saved and restored to “Holy Rus”. This kind of conflation of race, nation and the church, the authors of the “Russian world” declaration point out, has previously been condemned as a heresy by the Orthodox tradition. » | Editorial | Sunday, April 3, 2022

‘What Would This Ukrainian Like for Her 100th Birthday? That Putin Will Die’

THE OBSERVER: Elderly citizens in Kyiv who have lived through Hitler’s Holocaust and Stalin’s Holodomor fear that history is repeating itself with Russia’s invasion

Olha Punyk, 69, has tried to shield her 99-year-old mother, Anna Bahatelya, from the worst news about the war. Photograph: Sviatoslav Medyk/The Observer

Ninety-nine years and eight months old, Anna Bahatelya has survived every ordeal a tumultuous century of Ukrainian history has thrown at her.

Born in August 1922, four months before the proclamation of the Soviet Union, Bahatelya lived through the Holodomor, when Joseph Stalin’s regime visited an artificial famine on large areas of Ukraine by confiscating its grain stocks. She survived the second world war, even after spending two years in a Nazi slave camp in Austria.

She has outlived the Soviet Union and then made it through the difficult 1990s, when the Ukrainian economy left many in poverty. This January she survived a vicious bout of Covid, despite being unvaccinated. Now, four months short of her century, she faces yet another challenge: Vladimir Putin’s war on her country.

“Now again, the people are suffering,” she said at her home on the outskirts of Kyiv, where she lives with her 69-year-old daughter, Olha Punyk.

Speaking loudly, with an imploring tone and the cadence of poetry, Bahatelya gives sharp and clear recollections of the various ordeals she has been through, but grew angry when asked about the Russian president, making a rude hand gesture and calling him: “The worst man in the world.” » | Shaun Walker in Kyiv | Sunday, April 3, 2022

Dimitra’s Dishes: Tsoureki Rolls (Vanilla- & Chocolate-filled)


Get the recipe here.

The Ultimate Tsoureki Baking Guide here.

WIKIPEDIA: Mahleb / Mahalepi.

The Power of Gentle Touch: How Does Touch Affect Our Mental and Physical Health? | DW Documentary

Apr 2, 2022 • Touch shapes us as humans. Indeed, touch is fundamental to what makes us social beings. Touch influences how we perceive stress and pain, who we trust and who we fear. How does this work? And what happens to us in the absence of touch?

Gentle touch is vital for us humans. It creates the first contact with the world for newborns, giving us a sense of security and belonging. Touch influences our immune system, and on our feelings for our fellow human beings. Especially strong feelings, such as love or compassion, can be better conveyed through touch than through words, facial expressions or gestures.

Given how important touch is, it’s no surprise that humans have a highly specialized system devoted exclusively to perceiving gentle touch stimuli. Why does the touch of a stranger feel so different from that of someone we are emotionally close to? What is happening in our brain - and what role does the brain play in all this?

In an era of social distancing, touch research is becoming increasingly relevant. How does it affect us, and our relationships, when we are required to keep our distance? Researchers explore what role touch plays in our physical and emotional well-being, and what the consequences are when touch is missing.


Ungarn gespalten zwischen West und Ost - Das System Orbán | auslandsjournal

Mar 31, 2022 • Ministerpräsident Viktor Orbán kämpft um die Macht. In Ungarn ist alles auf ihn ausgerichtet: Presse, Wirtschaft und Rechtsstaat. Die Opposition hat es schwer, gegen diesen Machtapparat anzukommen. Doch der Widerstand wächst – im eigenen Land und in der EU. Unsere ZDF-Osteuropa-Korrespondentin Britta Hilpert und Korrespondent Wolf-Christian Ulrich berichten über die aktuelle Lage in Ungarn und darüber, wie das System Orbán das Leben der Menschen in Ungarn beeinflusst.

Ohne zu zögern nimmt Ungarn geflüchtete Ukrainer*innen auf. Das Land, welches eigentlich für eine harte Migrationspolitik bekannt ist, zeigt sich gastfreundlich und hilfsbereit. Die Nähe zu Russland, die Orbán vor dem Krieg pflegte, wird nun überlagert durch Nachbarschaftshilfe – zum eigenen Machterhalt.

Und doch sind die Beziehungen zu Russland für Ungarns Ministerpräsidenten wichtig. Orbán gehört deshalb zu den Bremsern bei EU-Sanktionen gegen Russland. Der Außenminister und Träger des russischen Freundschaftsordens schließt ungarische Hilfe für die Ukraine gar aus.

Um gegen Ministerpräsident Orbán anzukommen, hat sich die Opposition mittlerweile zusammengeschlossen. Vereint wollen sie für ein liberales Ungarn einstehen – ohne russischen Einfluss und Korruption. Denn es sind immer die gleichen wenigen Leute, die in Ungarn das große Geschäft machen.

Putin-Freund Orbán steht unter Druck. Wird sein System das überstehen?


Putin's Antithesis: How Does Zelenskyy's Political Communication Work? | DW News

Apr 3, 2022 • Volodymyr Zelenskyy has undergone an extraordinary transformation from an entertainer dancing in high heels to a wartime leader in green khaki t-shirts. Zelenskyy's regular selfie-style addresses have won him the eyes and ears, as well as the hearts, of many at home and abroad. He has also received standing ovations from politicians around the world. Many say that much of his remarkable success in leading his country against Russia’s invasion stems from what he says and how he says it. But how exactly does Zelenskyy communicate?

Is Germany Complicit in Putin's War in Ukraine? | DW News

Mar 31, 2022 • Defense Minister Christine Lambrecht said Germany was "facing the consequences" of the new reality triggered by Russia's invasion of Ukraine. She stressed Europe's need to have the US as an ally and friend. Despite the major pivot to increase defense spending in line with NATO goals and strengthen its own military in the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, she said Germany's first choice would always be dialogue. "We will never presume to go it alone. We will always remain closely integrated in the European Union, in NATO, in the United Nations," Lambrecht added. Lambrecht praised US President Joe Biden's leadership in the global political crisis triggered by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, adding that Europe needs the US as a friend and ally.

Germany's Economy Minister Robert Habeck said on Friday that the country is planning to almost completely end Russian energy imports by the end of the year. Habeck, a member of the Green Party, said the plan meant that a considerable amount of progress would be made in a short space of time, as the West is rushing to wean itself off Russian energy amidst the invasion of Ukraine. Before the war began and the subsequent heavy sanctions targeting Russia, Germany received 50% of its coal, 55% of its gas, and 35% of its oil from Moscow.



Verwandt.

How Putin’s Demand for Ruble Payments for Gas Will Play Out (w/ Richard Wolff)

Mar 30, 2022 • Germany buys 40% of its gas from Russia, via the Nord Stream 1 pipeline. These contracts are in euros and dollars, yet Russia is now demanding payment in Roubles. Germany has declined and warned that there may be shortages and rationing of gas.

Ukrainischer Botschafter attackiert Steinmeier

Bundespräsident Frank-Walter Steinmeier | Bild: AP

„KEIN BEZUG ZUR UKRAINE“

FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Der Top-Diplomat der Ukraine in Deutschland, Andrij Melnyk, wirft dem Bundespräsidenten eine zu große Nähe zu Russland vor. An der deutschen Abhängigkeit von russischer Energie habe Steinmeier eine Mitschuld.

Bundespräsident Frank-Walter Steinmeier hat nach Ansicht des ukrainischen Botschafters in Deutschland, Andrij Melnyk, eine höchst bedenkliche politische Nähe zu Russland. „Für Steinmeier war und bleibt das Verhältnis zu Russland etwas Fundamentales, ja Heiliges, egal was geschieht. Auch der Angriffskrieg spielt da keine große Rolle“, sagte Melnyk dem „Tagesspiegel“ vom Sonntag.

Deutschland habe weiter zu viele Eigeninteressen in Bezug auf Russland, etwa die Abhängigkeit von Gas, Öl und Kohle. Schuld daran sei auch Steinmeiers Agieren als Kanzleramtschef und später als Außenminister, sagte Melnyk der Zeitung. „Steinmeier hat seit Jahrzehnten ein Spinnennetz der Kontakte mit Russland geknüpft. Darin sind viele Leute verwickelt, die jetzt in der Ampel das Sagen haben“, sagte er und nannte namentlich den außenpolitischen Berater von Bundeskanzler Olaf Scholz (SPD), Jens Plötner, und den Staatssekretär im Auswärtigen Amt, Andreas Michaelis. Hinzu kämen viele wichtige Botschafter. „Das alles macht einen Unterschied“, sagte Melnyk. » | Quelle: dpa/AFP | Sonntag, 3. April 2022

Chris Hedges | Richard Wolff: The Future of the American Economy

Ukraine: Why the Cartoon Masyanya Was Banned in Russia


Read the blurb here.

Zelensky Spokesman Describes Heartbreaking Scenes in Ukraine


Read the article here.

Saturday, April 02, 2022

Young People Struggling amid Inflation Are Entitled, Says CEO Worth about $400m

THE GUARDIAN: BlackRock’s Robert Kapito is right about the entitlement problem in the US: we have a very entitled generation of executives who seem to think sacrifice is just for poor people

Robert Kapito, the president of asset management behemoth BlackRock, earns about $20m a year and is worth in the region of $400m. You can buy a lot of fancy trinkets with that kind of money but, alas, it doesn’t seem to purchase much self-awareness. We are in the middle of a cost of living crisis, with low-income households disproportionately affected by the highest inflation in 40 years. People are struggling to heat their homes thanks to surging energy prices and worrying about feeding their families thanks to rocketing food prices. Kapito’s reaction to all this? To complain to a bunch of energy executives about how entitled young people are and how it’s about time they learned a thing or two about how tough life is.

“For the first time, this generation is going to go into a store and not be able to get what they want,” Kapito recently said at an energy conference in Texas in reference to inflation. “And we have a very entitled generation that has never had to sacrifice.” Young people too entitled, says CEO worth $400m » | Arwa Mahdawi | Saturday, April 2, 2022

What a disgusting comment! What a disgusting man! – Mark

Stunning Images inside Russian Grocery Store Show Dire Situation

Apr 2, 2022 • CNN's Matthew Chance reports on the economic situation inside Russia after Western nations imposed crippling economic sanctions in retaliation for Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Dancing, Loving, Uniting…

Danser, aimer, unir… / Tanzen, Lieben, Vereinen…

Many thanks to Aisle Society for this tender, inspiring photo.

Orleans - Dance with Me

Views on YouTube: 1,205,234

Leonard Cohen : Dance Me to the End of Love | Official Video

Views on YouTube: 128,152,064

Dimitra’s Dishes: Koulourakia: Greek Easter Butter Cookies/ 2 Ways!

Apr 4, 2020 • Once you try these Greek butter cookies, known as koulourakia, you will make them all year long. These cookies are flavored with vanilla, citrus (optional), and even chocolate. The dough is made with basic pantry staples and then twisted into all sorts of beautiful shapes. Get the coffee ready and call the kids into the kitchen for some fun baking time!


Get the recipe here.

«Frankreich ist Brigitte Bardot und Topless-Sonnenbaden – nicht Schleier und Burkini»


NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: Die Wiederwahl des französischen Präsidenten Macron scheint wahrscheinlich. Aber fast jeder dritte Franzose will seine Stimme einem Kandidaten der extremen Rechten geben. Warum?

Sie fühlen sich fremd in der eigenen Heimat. Sie erkennen ihr Land nicht mehr. Sie sehen es im Niedergang begriffen. «Frankreich muss Frankreich bleiben.» Dieser Satz fällt mehr als einmal an diesem Sonntagmorgen auf dem charmanten Markt in der Rue Cler im wohlhabenden 7. Arrondissement von Paris. Er kommt von Anhängern des Präsidentschaftskandidaten Éric Zemmour. Inmitten von Obst und Gemüse, bunten Schnittblumen und einer grossen Auswahl an Käse verteilen sie Passanten dessen Wahlprogramm.

«Frankreich ist Brigitte Bardot und Topless-Sonnenbaden – nicht Schleier und Burkini», sagt eine 50-jährige Wahlhelferin im Deux-Pièces. Sie wolle weiterhin ihren Hintern zeigen und Schmuck tragen dürfen. Sie lacht ob ihrer Aussage, schiebt aber nach, sie meine das ernst. Die junge Kollegin neben ihr, mit auffälliger Fendi-Sonnenbrille, nickt: «Stellen Sie sich vor, in einigen Quartieren gibt es Cafés, in denen Frauen der Zutritt verwehrt bleibt.» In diesen Stadtteilen gebe es fast nur Muslime, fügt eine andere Wahlhelferin an, viele seien ja nett, aber: «Es ist nicht unsere Kultur.» » | Nicole Anliker und Nina Belz (Text) und Karin Hofer (Bilder) | Samstag, 2. April 2022

Ces oligarques russes qui font trembler les journalistes et les écrivains britanniques

La journaliste britannique, Catherine Belton (à gauche), a été attaquée en diffamation par plusieurs oligarques russes dont Roman Abramovitch (à droite), propriétaire du club de football Chelsea, après la publication de son livre Putin’s People. TT News Agency via AFP / ADAM IHSE / AFP / JUSTIN TALLIS

LE FIGARO : DÉCRYPTAGE - Le premier ministre Boris Johnson souhaite en finir avec les lois du pays sur la diffamation qui entravent depuis des années la liberté d’enquête sur ces proches de Poutine.

Un beau matin de printemps, Catherine Bolton, ancienne correspondante du Financial Times à Moscou, découvrait dans sa boîte aux lettres londonienne un courrier de l’oligarque russe Roman Abramovitch. Le milliardaire propriétaire de Chelsea portait plainte contre la journaliste pour diffamation, après la publication de son livre Putin’s People. Son enquête, qui met en lumière les personnalités qui gravitent autour des cercles de pouvoir de Vladimir Poutine, affirmait qu’il avait acheté le club de football en 2003 sur ordres du président russe. Défendu par Nigel Tait, associé du cabinet britannique Carter-Ruck, l’oligarque lui réclamait plusieurs millions de livres de dommages et intérêts.

«À coups de lettres, de coups de fil menaçants et de procès, les oligarques russes, aidés par de grands cabinets d’avocats anglais, empêchent depuis des années la publication de nombreux articles sur eux dans les journaux. Ces entraves à la liberté d’expression doivent cesser», témoignait Catherine Bolton la semaine passée, devant la commission parlementaire des affaires étrangères. Jusqu’à ce que la guerre en Ukraine bouleverse le climat politique, la population anglaise méconnaissait l’histoire des oligarques russes implantés dans les quartiers chics de la capitale, comme Knightsbridge et Belgravia. En grande partie parce que mener des enquêtes sur ces personnalités représente un risque financier de taille. Les rares rédactions qui s’y sont essayées, comme le Financial Times, The Guardian ou The Economist, ont été condamnées par les tribunaux à payer des millions de livres en diffamation. » | Par Claudia Cohen | vendredi 1 avril 2022

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