SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill who wrote (1465128)6/28/2024 6:19:16 AM
From: golfer722 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
the traveler

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574376
 
TDS has a lot of different symptoms. Loss of mental faculties and reasoning ability are just two of them



To: Bill who wrote (1465128)6/28/2024 7:01:50 AM
From: the traveler2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Bill
longz

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574376
 
Biden should have chickened out. He would be much better off this morning if he had. It's one of the most pitiful and cruel thangs I have ever witnessed.

PS--who will the dirty ol egg suckin demos run for POTUS?



To: Bill who wrote (1465128)6/28/2024 7:04:28 AM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1574376
 
Few know more about him than me.



To: Bill who wrote (1465128)6/28/2024 7:04:47 AM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1574376
 

Vladimir Putin 'assassination warning' as Russia threatens to 'explode with anger' (msn.com)



vladimir putin close up worried© Getty

The assassination of Vladimir Putin would result in an "explosion of anger and outrage" across Russia, a British historian has warned.

Putin has been threatened by at least murder plots since taking over power in 1999 and the ongoing war in Ukraine has only exacerbated feelings of resentment against the Russian leader.

A group of exiled politicians calling themselves the Congress of People's Deputies have met in Poland this week to discuss a seven-point plan to eliminate President Putin and put an end to his regime.

The "shadow parliament" went as far as planning to request NATO's support for a campaign of political assassinations as well as the extension of sanctions against Russia.

However, historian Mark Galeotti challenged the move and noted a successful assassination is unlikely to be met with the approval of the Russian people - and could instead cause widespread chaos and anger.


vladimit putin sitting at wooden desk© Getty

Writing in The Spectator, Mr Galeotti said: "Were he to die next week, the odds are good that power would shift not to a fellow septuagenarian, but to the next political generation, who are best characterised as opportunist kleptocrats, willing to parrot Putin's paranoid nationalist rhetoric today to remain in office, but more interested in the good life than any crusade against the West.

"However, any campaign of Western-backed assassination, especially if it were able to penetrate the (frankly, formidable) protection around Putin himself, would likely trigger not some democratic revolution but an explosion of anger and outrage."

He argued Ukraine's allies in the West should instead capitalise on on-the-ground dissent and criticism of Putin's government to foster a potential political threat from within Russia's borders.

Reports of dissatisfaction among troops, because of unsuitable commanders and the high death rate, have been constant since the start of the invasion.

The families of conscripted soldiers have also defied the widespread crackdown of Putin's critics to demand the return of their loved ones from the front.


vladimir putin mid shot in front of brick wall© Getty

The Congress of People's Deputies argued real change in Russia can only be achieved via the forced removal of Putin and his cronies from the Kremlin.

The émigré group said that it is "no longer an option but simply a duty" of NATO to help push through "revolutionary action" in Russia.

They plan to unveil their full proposal at the 75th NATO summit in Washington DC next month.

Part of the proposal reads: "The use of force against Putin's murderers, their financiers and propagandists, is morally justified - [when] consistent with the internally recognised norms of warfare - and imperative for victory.

"The Kremlin has already unleashed a massive bloodshed that is killing hundreds of Russians on the front line every day, as well as numerous Ukrainians, both military and civilians."



To: Bill who wrote (1465128)6/28/2024 7:05:41 AM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1574376
 

Vladimir Putin’s latest escalation has hit far too close to home (msn.com)



Ambulances stand outside an NHS hospital in London© Provided by The Telegraph

Russian hackers have caused chaos in the NHS and put patients in danger. This month, one of the most serious cyber attacks we have ever faced hit London hospitals and GP surgeries by locking pathology service providers out of their own IT systems. This has forced more than 1,100 operations to be postponed, including cancer treatments and organ transplants. Thousands of outpatient appointments have been cancelled and vast numbers of patients’ records stolen, some of which have been published on the dark web. They include results of blood tests for cancer and HIV.

Make no mistake. This is a terrorist attack on the UK, which has already resulted in widespread suffering and may cause deaths.

The hackers, who call themselves Qilin, operate out of Russia. They were first known to be active in 2022 and their activities have so far been thought to be criminal, using cyber attacks to extort large sums of cash from their victims. But Qilin claim they carried out this attack – in which a £40?million ransom was demanded – over Britain’s role in an unspecified war.

That may or may not be the motive, but it is far from implausible. Vladimir Putin seeks to create chaos in the West, to undermine support for Ukraine by demonstrating the high costs of that support. He has reportedly recruited criminal gangs to carry out sabotage against Western factories supplying arms to Ukraine, including cyber attacks. We have already seen indications of such action in Britain, the US, Germany and Poland.

Links between freelance hackers and Russian intelligence services have been growing since the 2022 invasion. It is possible Qilin is run and directed by one of the Kremlin’s agencies, and that it is provided with encouragement, information and technology. As a minimum, Russian law enforcement are turning a blind eye on these cyber gangs. For that, Putin is culpable.

It must be a priority to shut down Qilin, which has expanded into the largest Russian enterprise of its kind. That won’t be easy, although the National Crime Agency did manage to inflict serious disruption on another large-scale ransomware gang this year.

We need to go further in dealing with such an attack on our country. Unless we respond vigorously to this sort of aggression, we will face continuing escalation. Our relative inaction in the face of a nerve agent attack on British soil in 2018 helped solidify Putin’s impression of Western weakness. This may well have contributed to his calculations on invading Ukraine.

Words of outrage are not enough. In a face-to-face meeting in 2021, Joe Biden warned Putin against cyber attacks on critical US national infrastructure. That was ignored, and we have seen numerous attacks since on American facilities, including hospitals.

We should certainly be considering retaliatory cyber attacks, not against Russian hospitals but against military targets and armaments factories. But the most immediate and effective step we can take is to demonstrate to Putin that aggression against our country will have the opposite effect to what he intends, by ramping up our supply of long-range weapons. Not only should we allow President Zelensky to use them against Russian soil, but we should encourage him, and provide the intelligence to help with targeting. Only then might Putin get the message.



To: Bill who wrote (1465128)6/28/2024 2:19:38 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
longz

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574376
 
  • 250+ J6 prisoners could now be set free from prison. Two of four J6 obstruction charges against Trump will be thrown out.
  • DOJ thought they could railroad J6 prisoners with Enron felony.
  • This is a very bad day for Jack Smith and Judge Chutkan.



  • To: Bill who wrote (1465128)6/28/2024 2:23:09 PM
    From: FJB1 Recommendation

    Recommended By
    longz

      Respond to of 1574376
     
  • Breaking — Chip Roy Files Resolution Calling on Kamala Harris to Invoke 25th Amendment.
  • Holy Hoboken — Trump takes lead in New Jersey poll.



  • To: Bill who wrote (1465128)6/28/2024 2:25:20 PM
    From: FJB1 Recommendation

    Recommended By
    longz

      Respond to of 1574376