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To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1397256)4/1/2023 7:32:00 AM
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You're seriously arguing Trump can't be extradited to NY because he lives in FL? Does this work for ordinary felons too?



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1397256)4/1/2023 7:33:06 AM
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Guess who's been buying fentanyl from the Far East and reshipping it across the US?

A California police union director is being charged with importing opioids, including fentanyl, disguised as chocolate and wedding favors

By Alaa Elassar, CNN

Updated 9:19 AM EDT, Fri March 31, 202



Joanne Marian Segovia

CNN —
The executive director of a police union in California has been placed on leave and is facing federal charges after allegedly importing drugs from overseas and distributing them throughout the country.

Joanne Marian Segovia, 64, ordered thousands of synthetic opioids including valeryl fentanyl that were disguised as chocolates, wedding favors and makeup, according to the criminal complaint filed Monday by the Office of the United States Attorney.

Segovia, who serves as the executive director of the San Jose Police Officers’ Association (SJPOA), allegedly used her personal and office computers to order the opioids and made shipments using the union’s UPS account, the complaint said.

Segovia has been the executive director of the union, which represents officers with the San Jose Police Department, for nearly 20 years, according to CNN affiliate KGO-TV.

At least 61 shipments containing drugs worth thousands of dollars coming from countries including Hong Kong, Hungary, India and Singapore were shipped to Segovia’s home between October 2015 and January this year, according to the complaint.

“The manifests for these shipments declared their contents with labels like ‘Wedding Party Favors,’ ‘Gift Makeup,’ or ‘Chocolate and Sweets,’” the United States Attorneys Office for Northern California said in a press release.

“But between July 2019 and January 2023, officials intercepted and opened five of these shipments and found that they contained thousands of pills of controlled substances, including the synthetic opioids Tramadol and Tapentadol,” the press release said.

In February 2023, Segovia was interviewed by federal investigators but she continued to order drug shipments, including a package in March containing valeryl fentanyl seized by federal agents in Kentucky, according to the complaint.

Segovia has been charged with attempt to unlawfully import valeryl fentanyl and faces up to a maximum sentence of 20 years, according to the complaint.

An attorney for Segovia did not respond to CNN’s request for comment.

Segovia has been placed on leave and cut off from all access to the police officers association, San Jose Police Officers Association spokesperson Tom Saggau told CNN in a statement. No other individuals with the association were involved or knew about the scheme, Saggau said.

“Last Friday we were informed by federal authorities that one of our civilian employees was under investigation for distribution of a controlled substance and the POA has been fully and completely cooperating with the federal authorities as they continue their investigation,” Saggau said. “The Board of Directors is saddened and disappointed at hearing this news and we have pledged to provide our full support to the investigative authorities.”

cnn.com



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1397256)4/1/2023 7:39:00 AM
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Tom Nichols

Vladimir Putin destroying his own army and helping NATO to get to 32 of the richest and most powerful nations on earth is the greatest self-own in history.

But Elon Musk destroying 20 billion dollars in value because of status envy is the winner in the capitalism division




To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1397256)4/1/2023 7:43:52 AM
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How to Lose Nations and Alienate People, by Vladimir Putin

February 25, 2022 Brian E. Frydenborg
When it comes to Ukraine, Russia is like an abusive ex-husband who will not let go( Russian/??????? ???????) By Brian E. Frydenborg, February 25, 2022 ( Twitter @bfry1981; LinkedIn, Facebook); excerpted and slightly adapted from his article The Utter Banality of Putin’s Kabuki Campaign in Ukraine published by Small Wars Journal the morning of February 21 and featured by SOF News on February 26; see related articles excerpted and slightly adapted from that piece:

February 21: Why Is Putin Doing All This Now?March 1: Putin’s NATO Narrative Is BullshitMarch 16: Putin’s Zombie Russian/Slavic Ethnonationalism Is Utterly BanalAlso see March 8 follow-up Small Wars Journal piece The Beginning of the End of Putin? Why the Russian Army May (and Should) Revolt (featured on March 9 by Real Clear Defense, The National Endowment for Democracy’s (NED) Democracy Digest, and SOF News) and related articles excerpted and slightly adapted from that piece:

March 9: A Look at Putin’s Disgraceful, Heartless, Barbaric Treatment of Russian Soldiers and Their FamiliesMarch 11: On Casualties Counts in Russia’s War on UkraineMarch 13: How Best to Penetrate Putin’s Media Iron Curtain in Russia? Dead Russian TroopsMarch 19: Time for the Russian Army and Russian People to Revolt and Overthrow PutinSeptember 16: I Saw This War Could Be Putin’s Undoing All the Way Back in Early March AP Photo / Ian Langsdon

WASHINGTON and SILVER SPRING—Most Ukrainians are not falling for Putin’s playbook.

Instead, they are emphatically rejecting Putin’s bankrupt ethnonationalist chauvinism, with Putin’s and Russia’s standing among Ukrainians falling sharply in recent years. There is a drop in enthusiasm for this program even among the ethnic Russians of Ukraine. Ultimately, in the face of Putin’s boring bluster (and that of his stooge, the now-overthrown and disgraced former president Viktor Yanukovych), Ukrainians over the past decade have only moved more towards a Ukrainian and European identity after years of intense Kremlin hostility towards Ukraine.

Putin has few others to blame but himself for this with all his interfering in and treating Ukraine horribly for far too long: instead of years ago building on his then-higher support and higher levels of pro-Russian sentiment with good-faith, mutually beneficial policies that would prove Russia a true friend to Ukraine (as I argued he should years ago), it is war, corruption, and lies that have characterized Putin’s Ukraine policy and his foreign policy in general, carried out using a trifecta of government, oligarchs, and the Russian mafia that can be hard to separate into its component parts, so deep is the corruption.

When those efforts fail for Putin, he has not been shy in using his military or, it seems, in attempting assassination: Russia is a prime suspect in a poisoning attempt that almost succeeded in late 2004 against then-soon-to-be-President of Ukraine Viktor Yushchenko, the hero of the Orange Revolution that prevented the corrupt Yanukovych from being corruptly imposed on Ukraine per Putin’s plan, at least until Yanukovych’s 2010 comeback at the direction of Trump’s future campaign manager, Paul Manafort; it was Yanukovych’s betrayal of the Ukrainian people to Putin—who still harbors him in Russia from Ukrainian prosecution and jail—that sparked the 2013-2014 (Euro)Maidan revolution that saw Yanukovych driven from power, precipitating the hostilities in Crimea and Ukraine’s east, the latter of which are still ongoing.

In essence, Russia’s outstretched hand progressively offers corruption, submission, intimidation, and brute force, but nothing better.

All this is now only too painfully obvious to most Ukrainians, more and more of whom are turning away from Russia and toward the West, including the EU and NATO. This shift is dramatically accelerated further by Putin also in that by illegally annexing Crimea and promoting a separatist war in Ukraine’s far east, he has essentially removed parts of two of the most ethnically Russian, pro-Russian parts of Ukraine out of the country’s political equation, helping Ukraine to move even more forcefully than it already was in a Ukrainian nationalist, anti-Russian, pro-Western/NATO direction.

This all may even be prompting a shift in thinking in non-NATO states like Sweden and Finland, both near (and the latter on the border of) Russia, about their non-membership. A new invasion by Russia would, at the very least, increase their current security relationships with the Alliance, and Finnish President Sauli Niinistö even just said on Sunday that the thinking on this in Finland has already changed for some and that Russia invading Ukraine would further increase sentiment for joining NATO.

Putin’s standing in the world even before this crisis was at something of a nadir, and this will further damage his reputation and the Russia he is leading, especially in Eastern Europe where he hopes to gain, not lose influence. In short, Putin’s murderous bullying has driven those he seeks to dominate into the arms of his enemies, counterproductive to Russian interests.

Oops.

Putin is certainly a crafty leader, but we must stop assuming that everything he does is some kind of genius move and part of a coherent master plan. Yes, his cyberwarfare has been incredibly effective, but he is also perfectly capable of making bad decisions that set him and Russia back, as his actions toward Ukraine amply demonstrate.

Russia, that Abusive Ex Who Will Not Let Go

It should be no surprise that it turns out when Russia treats countries horribly, they do not want to enter in alliances with it and will, instead, eagerly break away from Russian domination when they can and just as eagerly join with NATO, as is their right as free and independent nations (the natural consequences of imperial collapse all throughout history, from which Russia is not immune).

Yet this concept seems unable to enter Putin’s understanding of the world such that he refuses to accept Ukraine became an independent country decades ago. This makes him much like an abusive ex-husband who somehow feels entitled to control his fully-divorced-from-him, now-dating-someone-else ex-wife. Here, that ex-wife is Ukraine and is dating the West, and Putin thinks that in showing up at his ex’s house, smashing things up, and slapping and hitting her, he will somehow reimpose his control. Instead, having agency as a free woman, she will seek the protection of her far more powerful new boyfriend, seek engagement and marriage. And yet, the new boyfriend will feel nervous about this crazy ex. Here, Ukraine is hoping this new love interest and his family, who all treat her better than her ex, can perhaps just gang up and say “Bruh, she’s moved on. You’re yesterday’s news. You and her, it’s over. Move on!” and to some degree, that is happening, but also to some degree, Russia is scaring this boyfriend away from getting more serious with Ukraine and entering into a more firm and meaningful commitment.

That is because, contrary to Russia’s claims, the West does not want confrontation, let alone war, with Russia. NATO is a defensive alliance and in its entire history has never attacked Russia. They are holding up on getting more serious with Ukraine precisely because of this crazy ex-boyfriend routine Putin is pulling.

And if you are wondering why I am using this analogy, I am not trying to be funny or treat violence against women or spousal abuse lightly: Putin even earlier this month crassly addressed Ukraine as a woman in a relationship who should submit to her man (“Like it or don’t like it, it’s your duty, my beauty,” he said aloud). And a stalker-abusive relationship that is long past divorce in which the abusive party has no authority over or right to demand anything from the victim is a very apt comparison to the situation at hand.

See all Brian’s Ukraine coverage here

© 2022 Brian E. Frydenborg all rights reserved, permission required for republication, attributed quotations welcome

Also see my eBook, A Song of Gas and Politics: How Ukraine Is at the Center of Trump-Russia, or, Ukrainegate: A “New” Phase in the Trump-Russia Saga Made from Recycled Materials, available for Amazon Kindle and Barnes & Noble Nook (preview here), and be sure to check out Brian’s new podcast!

realcontextnews.com



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To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1397256)4/1/2023 7:54:14 AM
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The Putin Illusion: A Psychological Profile - Part IIThe Fragile Russian Doll - Sam Ray © 2023 - Counter-Narcissist Intelligence

Sam Ray

Mar 17



Matryoshka dolls, aka Russian dolls are an apt symbol for the many layers of Russia.
In case you missed it, see The Putin Illusion Part I - What is wrong with Russia?

A Russian nesting doll is an apt analogy for Putin. In an attempt to analyze the multiple layers of his persona, it is possible to imagine him starting out as a tiny, little Putin who goes through several stages and is eventually engulfed by a massive Kremlin-sized ego.

When I sought out the psychological questions that experts and others have about Putin, to help me better analyze him, some asked whether Putin has a Napoleon complex? Well, he was small during puberty and bullied, and he is reportedly the same height Napoleon was, so there seems some validity there.

But the most consistent question I came across was: “What is he sick with?” Parkinson’s and cancer were the main suspicions. Then a doctor friend suspected steroids due to lingering Covid, because a rounder face and a bloated belly can be symptoms of steroid use. Once steroids were mentioned, a light bulb came on.

Given that Putin only respects strength and despises weakness, is getting too old to play the tough guy on TV, and that in his era, Russian athletes keep getting caught cheating with steroids, it almost seems a certainty that he has been taking steroids for several years to “pump himself up.” It is only circumstantial evidence but fits the facts.

Additionally “roid rage” could explain how he deluded himself into thinking that invading Ukraine was a good idea. Economically, politically and militarily, it has been a massive miscalculated disaster that has backfired on him spectacularly, and only looks to get worse for Russia, unless his inner circle ends his mad reign in a coup.

Some Putin experts, including those who know him well, have noted that his actions seem like those of an old man who knows he is running out of time. Illness is the assumed reason but is only speculation. However, abuse of steroids also is known to cause illnesses, including cancer, so these may be chicken or egg questions.

Whether steroids or illness contributed to Putin’s aggressiveness, arrogance, delusions of grandeur, narcissism and conspiratorial thinking, all of those traits have long been recognized as central aspects of his underlying psychology.

Putin’s Root Motivations From a Psychological Perspective

“I cannot forecast to you the action of Russia. It is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma.”

Winston Churchill, 1939

What inhibited Churchill’s ability to forecast Russia is a thorough 21st century understanding of how narcissist psychology makes authoritarians like Putin predictable.

As I stated in Trumpism is Narcissism, in the course of learning how to rescue a friend from a sociopath, I found an area that explains Putin (and the GOP and trump): “Pathological narcissism is in essence compulsive self-serving behavior so their entire purpose in life is to fill an empty hole they can never fill. That is why there is no bottom to the depths these greedy, toxic abusers will go, and there is little to nothing society can do to help them change. What we can do is wisely limit the damage.

As former Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch said to Congress shortly after her 2019 removal, “Putin is a man who only understands strength.” Indeed, first and foremost, the thing every pathological narcissist like Putin respects and fears is a greater strength and power, and in particular higher-level narcissists, because these people know their every move and are superior at their entire “game.”

To better understand the dynamic between narcissists like Putin and trump, I find a scene from The Chronicles of Riddick a helpful conceptualization. Just before a big battle, Riddick and his protégé discuss playing their favorite game, “Who’s the better killer?

From the moment narcissists, sociopaths and/or psychopaths meet, they instantly play the game, “Who’s the better (and more powerful) narcissist?” Normally, a grandiose narcissist dominates more insecure narcissists, while a sociopath dominates most grandiose narcissists, but all narcissists normally bow and submit to intelligent organized psychopaths, who are the best narcissists. At each level of unhealthy narcissism, the “better narcissist” instinctively knows how to push all their lessers’ buttons and triggers, to assert their dominance as the “superior.”

This dynamic clarifies why trump is so psychologically subservient to Putin and why trump’s narcissistic followers are so subservient to him. Each bows to the better narcissist. So next time you wonder about the dynamic between two self-serving people, try asking, “Who’s the better narcissist?” Also consider a Russian doll as an analogy for how narcissists exist on a spectrum, ranging from the slightly selfish functioning person to highly intelligent psychopaths, and how differences in between the different levels of narcissists reveal the most about these individuals.

We are currently dealing with Russia’s best narcissist — or at least the one he has turned himself into — in the past 22 years. As Alexandra Tolstoy said about her oligarch ex-boyfriend and Putin’s inner circle, “they are inevitably massive narcissists.

If we accept the theory that Putin is a pathological narcissist, then his war on Ukraine is little more than his compulsive need to assert dominance and cruelly exact revenge on a people who committed the unforgivable sin of not submitting to his “greatness.” It also is his pathological need for absolute rule over anyone who dares challenge him, as he aggressively attempts to rebuild the Russian empire, purely for his own glory.

The theory also reveals that Putin does not believe much of anything he claims to believe or stand for. Most political science experts believe he is sincerely dedicated to Mother Russia and rebuilding the Russian empire. Based on pathological narcissism, however, this has nothing to do with benefiting Russia or its people, and everything to do with his delusional fantasy of himself as an absolute ruler. Putin believes he will be remembered for leaving a legacy of rebuilding the empire, as Czar Vlad the Great.

What a coincidence he always lied and manipulated his way up the Russian ladder of power, such as when he led previous President Boris Yeltsin to believe he was a democratic reformer too, and then kept up that illusion until he consolidated czar-like powers.

What has now become obvious is Putin doesn’t distinguish between himself, the state and Russia itself. This is because pathological narcissists don’t distinguish between their fantasies and reality, which confirms that when he says he is doing something for Russia, he is really only doing what is best for himself. It is never about Russia’s national interests. It’s always about the narcissist’s personal compulsive cravings and desires.

“What’s Next?”

What we must understand is Putin gives an excellent impression of a sociopath/psychopath, and whether he clinically is one or not, he is so close that pathological narcissist psychology explains how we need to view and deal with him.

First, we must understand cruelty is his point, because inflicting pain gets people to react emotionally instead of strategically, creates more trauma, produces more unhealthy narcissism, and makes small men feel big. Remember, this is the big man who legalized wife and child beating in 2017. This is the big man who is so scared of his political opponents and critics that they are almost all banned, in jail, exiled or murdered.

Second, we must understand that Putin will keep hitting our fear buttons, but like during the Cold War, we must unite in understanding that threatening nuclear weapons and starting WWIII are gaslighting fear traps. If he thinks we won’t respond, he might use a few, but if he understands the Kremlin will be turned to dust in response, he won’t consider it. Unlike trump, Putin understands approximately 100 nukes will block out the sun for two years, ending most of humanity, and he wants Russia around to worship Czar Vlad the Great’s legacy. There’s no glory in ending humanity.

Third, know he is driven by his own fears of being removed from power, being put in jail, or becoming another failed czar who meets the predictable end. Yes, he’s highly sociopathic/psychopathic but his outward behavior is him trying to mask his fears and appear scarier. Anyone who sits far from people at the end of a long table because he is a germaphobe and won’t ingest any food or drink that is not tested wants to live.

Fourth, narcissism psychology dictates that no one should ever need to guess what Putin’s intentions are again. He will always do what he craves and will relentlessly keep pushing for what he wants until blocked or stopped by harsh consequences, firm barriers or reality itself.

Cult expert Steven Hassan only escaped his cult when he finally realized the leader was a liar. Sadly, most Russians have spent many years living in a 1984, Big Brother dystopian lie, so they are conditioned to expect lies from everyone. The question for Russia’s remarkable civilization is, when does being a failed country of lies for the glorification of another terrible czar become too much for the Russian bear to bear?

On the bright side, Putin is showing the world the self-destructive overconfidence blindspot that is, by definition, the fatal flaw of every authoritarian narcissist.

Counter-Narcissist Intelligence is reader-supported research and analysis. To receive new posts and support my work, please consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

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Once again, the accuracy of counter-narcissist intelligence shines through. The Putin Illusion: The Fragile Russian Doll was originally published June 6, 2022, on DemCast, and not a single word needed to be changed. A few words have been changed here for temporal reasons, but essentially the analysis remains word for word, 9 months later.

You will find this is true with almost everything written here on CNI based on narcissist psychology, because while facts on the ground change, psychological analysis when done accurately, rarely changes.

samray.substack.com



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1397256)4/1/2023 8:00:13 AM
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The Putin Illusion: A Psychological Profile - Part IWhat is wrong with Russia? - Sam Ray © 2023 - Counter-Narcissist Intelligence

Sam Ray

Mar 14



Ukraine has revealed Putin to be a cruel and evil Wizard of Oz - Art by Windthin

With Putin’s unprovoked and unjust invasion, siege, and destruction of Ukraine, it is completely normal that most Americans feel dazed and horrified by Russia’s war-crime-level assaults on a civilian population.

However, as the Russian tactic of inflicting cruelty on innocents is endlessly repeated, daze turns to anger leaving most to ask: What’s wrong with Russia? What’s wrong with Putin? What’s next?

For those of us who have been studying international relations since Moscow ruled the Soviet Union, a world swimming in ridiculous and insane propaganda to justify another Russian land grab is nothing new. In fact, it seems pretty much par for Russia’s forever course.

False flags, invasions, destruction, cruelty, and land theft have all been a Russian norm for centuries. Apparently, they need to invade and dominate every neighboring country to create a “buffer zone.” Ironically, this makes them feel safe from invasion. Somehow, even with one-eighth of the earth’s landmass, they need more, mainly because Putin is threatened by Ukraine wanting to become a more Western European nation.

Thankfully, due to the determination, skill and bravery of the Ukrainian people defending their homeland, along with vital military support from the West, Putin’s invasion of Ukraine now echoes Moscow’s doomed invasion of Afghanistan. That occupation helped lead to the fall of the previous version of a propaganda-controlled, cruel, and greedy authoritarian Russian empire — the USSR. In other words, if Putin didn’t really see Ukraine as a threat before, the numerous Russian soldier casualties now indicate Ukraine could be his Waterloo.

In the late 1980s to early 1990s, as Russia’s communist empire came to an end and its captured “buffer-zone” countries began liberating themselves from Moscow’s rule, two main global themes emerged. The first was joy and relief at being able to let go of the daily fear that humanity could end at any moment in nuclear WWIII. The second was an understandable confusion most expressed about how and why the Russian “superpower” disintegrated, with the follow-up question of “What’s next?”

“What’s next?” was also the main question professors told us to think about in school. More specifically, how the world would change from an easy-to-understand, “us vs. them” mentality to a multi-polar world. A world where every country was focused on their own interests, instead of making sacrifices and compromises, to fight off the existential threat of an authoritarian Russia. A Russia that was trying to destroy every democracy, so they could rule the world with authoritarian communism.

What a strange coincidence that a now non-communist Russia is once again trying to destroy democracies by invading them or meddling in elections to install useful idiots, puppets, or wannabe dictators who will do Putin’s bidding. The goal clearly is to weaken and divide us from within so the entire world can be ruled with fascist-like authoritarianism.

Historical Habit of Unrealistic Pride, Unhealthy Narcissism and National Trauma

Throughout Russia’s history, leaders have carried out a relentless psychological operation to convince Russians of their specialness as a people and greatness as an empire. Somehow, these indoctrinated beliefs meant Russia was always entitled and justified in abusing, destroying or annexing anyone who dares say otherwise, or who stands in the way of Russia’s “greatness.” How coincidental that Russia’s greatness was always conflated with the ruler’s greatness, unless their failure was so complete that they must be overthrown, to make Russia great again.

The historical theme has been: Russia is great, getting greater all the time, and if you dare say different, we will attack you until you agree or just kill you. Russia’s long history of using violence, brutality, cruelty, propaganda and murder as primary political and military strategies is undeniable. This means that while Putin’s war-crime tactics are “shock and awe” to Americans, Eastern Europe views them as the same old Russia and explains why they will fight so hard. Their choices are to fight for freedom or surrender to Russia’s cruel dominance, again.



Due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, neutral Sweden and Finland are joining NATO.
In 1905, the backward yet seemingly mighty Russian bear was repeatedly humiliated in war by the tiny, little-known country of Japan. This shocking defeat and trauma caused the first revolution, which signified the beginning of the end of the Russian czarist monarchy. Vladimir Lenin called the 1905 revolution “The Great Dress Rehearsal” for the 1917 Communist revolution.

Once Russia’s brutal civil war for power ended in 1923, communist dictators Lenin and later Joseph Stalin imposed many more decades of trauma on the Russian people by rejecting any kind of free democratic socialism in favor of absolute dictatorship. As an authoritarian police state, the elites of Russia once again inflicted massive psychological and emotional damage and delusional thinking on the Russian people, until the Soviet Union fell in 1991.

Indeed the fall of the USSR was another colossal humiliation and trauma for the proud Russian people since they lost their “superpower” status and empire. They were forced to confront the truth that so much of what they were taught to believe with absolute certainty was mostly manipulative propaganda (See your future Fox “News” viewers).

Putin himself returned to Russia from Germany as an unemployed mid-level KGB officer who quickly leveraged his spy training and foreign experience into political operative jobs that required similar skill sets. In post-communist Russia, the only people who really understood capitalism were the Russian mafia, so Putin’s training in using kompromat on foreign businessmen and making deals with corrupt figures for the state’s benefit came naturally to him, as did using the power of the state in the shadows.

Putin maneuvered his way into becoming president by pretending to be a democratic reformer and appealing to Russian machismo by promising brutality against “Chechen terrorists.” Then he turned Russia into a giant gas station owned by former KGB officers, the mafia and anyone else willing to pay to play and let Putin be czar.

Of course, every dictatorship or authoritarian kleptocracy, whether czarist, communist or Putinist, has fatal flaws. Everyone is afraid of telling “dear leader” the truth, or even reporting bad news, since the leader doesn’t want to hear it and often kills the messenger. Corruption undermines everything, which is why the highly feared Russian military has been so ill equipped in Ukraine. The army Putin thought he built was an illusion because no one wanted to tell him that the money intended to modernize it was pocketed by his kleptocrat “allies.”

Authoritarian corruption of czars, communists, and for the last 22 years, a KGB-trained manipulator is a big part of why the Russian people must be constantly groomed with pro-Russian propaganda. Russia’s leaders understand that nothing can ever be their fault. When Russians realize that their leader is to blame for Russia’s failure or humiliation, that is when they rise up in revolution. Hence, whenever the inflated image of Russia falls short of reality, the leader tries to blame everyone else. This tactic of blaming failures on a scapegoat is standard operating procedure for every authoritarian leader and deflects the people’s rage and anger from their own incompetent leader.

Putin plays the victim by claiming an American/Nazi conspiracy intends to keep Russia down. He also promotes the completely contradictory ideas that the liberal values of democracy, diversity, women’s rights and LGBTQ+ rights are against God and threaten Russia’s existence. The latter is why misogynistic, bigoted and racist “Christians” love Putin, and since many tend to be insecure narcissists, they can be easily manipulated and always the easiest marks for anti-American spies like Putin.

The foundation of understanding Putin is understanding “What’s wrong with Russia?” and its long traumatic history of excessive violence. It is a story of entitled rulers who enslaved (serfdom/communism), brutalized, manipulated, and consistently used the proud Russian people as cannon fodder, in the name of Mother Russia, while usually only serving themselves. Putin’s leadership style is pretty much the norm for Russia. Peter the Great, the Westernized and Enlightenment-minded Catherine the Great, and Mikhail Gorbachev are among the few notable, quasi-modernizing exceptions.

In other words, selfish rule, corruption, cruelty, propaganda, militarism and murder have been consistent themes of nearly every Russian system of government. One can only imagine how centuries of physical, psychological and emotional abuse have affected the neurochemistry of the Russian people. So when trying to understand Putin via a “What’s wrong with Russia?” framework, the foundation seemingly is a centuries-old cycle of leaders conditioning the Russian people with brutality and false confidence. This history has resulted in centuries of inherited trauma, which is simple for a spy who controls the levers of power to manipulate to his own advantage.

Part II of The Putin Illusion - The Fragile Russian Doll

samray.substack.com