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It's a bit of a gangster universe out there, if Trump has the balls things could get interesting.

Australia has been "keeping swarthy foreigners out" for a while now, and quietly getting away with it

Trump quite rightly has told the Aussie PM to deal with his own in-house bullshit, it's not a US issue

yeah us is front and center intervening and destabilizing the ME ... as for the huge refugee crisis that we help create.. have fun everybody else we don't want them Muslims you take um all!!

the west obviously has to take a shared responsibility and you would think the nations that took the action to invade Iraq (the big destabalizing event which led to the refugee crisis) would take the initiative to deal with the repercussions of their actions.. instead us and U.K. Are saying have fun europe you deal with um!
 

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That's why trumps tweet about "illegal immigrants" is so unbelieably off base.. these "illegal immigrants" wouldn't be looking for a new home fleeing a war torn country if not for past actions that our nation took..

as usual the answer is it's somebody's else's problem.. just blame somebody else.. hang up on Aussie PM.. get angry!!.. we aren't the problem we are America!!
 

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Trump now tweeting out about him attending proceedings for people who died in the first big operation he gave the OK on..

Donald J. Trump ‏@realDonaldTrump
Attending Chief Ryan Owens' Dignified Transfer yesterday with my daughter Ivanka was my great honor. To a great and brave man - thank you!

just delete your twitter already trump.. do your job and quit broadcasting it to the world... quit making everything about you..
 

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Trump probably gonna get caught up in too many stupid battles to do much damage.. thankfully founders set up a good system to limit power hungry blowhards..

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The White House on Friday night said it would challenge "at the earliest possible time" a federal judge's ruling that blocked President Donald Trump's travel ban directive nationwide.
"At the earliest possible time, the Department of Justice intends to file an emergency stay of this order and defend the executive order of the President, which we believe is lawful and appropriate," press secretary Sean Spicer said in a statement released Friday. "The president’s order is intended to protect the homeland and he has the constitutional authority and responsibility to protect the American people."

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trump want to start a "war on evil"? Lol

first 2 weeks majority of focus has been on external shit.. when nearly all our problems are internal.. but not surprising that's what all power hungry blowhards do throughout the history of mankind..



Donald J. Trump– Verified account ‏@realDonaldTrump

yH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAANAAwAAAILjI py 0Po5y0ngIAOw==



We must keep "evil" out of our country!
3:08 PM - 3 Feb 2017
 

bushman
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The American people ...and the constitution... are what make America great.
 

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Trump of course takes to twitter and does what he always does blow hard..

The opinion of this so-called judge, which essentially takes law-enforcement away from our country, is ridiculous and will be overturned!
 

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Been noticing insane the amount of restaurants in my locale lately has to reach sarutratioj point soon before the bust.... this is a big part of where all the job growth has been during the "recovery"..and these jobs both pay shitty and are unsustainable..

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[h=1]There's A Massive Restaurant Bubble, And It's About To Burst[/h]In January 2009, just three days after his inauguration, an arrogant President Obama, a "community organizer" and one-term senator from Illinois, proclaimed to then Republican Whip Eric Cantor that "elections have consequences, and at the end of the day, I won." Unfortunately, he was absolutely right and the consequences of Obama's election, having already crushed the coal industry, are about to bring the restaurant industry crashing down as well.
To be fair, Obama hasn't crushed the restaurant industry single-handedly. While Obamacare went a long way toward destroying the industry, it's demise would not have been certain without a little help from leftist state legislators that have passed a slew of egregious minimum wage hikes in recent years (not that Obama didn't try and fail twice to accomplish the same thing at the federal level). Add to that a multi-year run of near 0% interest rates that have driven commercial real estate soaring and a dash of "hope" from culinary grads looking to become America's next famous celebrity chef and it's easy to see that you've had a recipe for disaster simmering on low heat for years.
And while he avoided the political attributions we note above, a recent Thrillist article by Keven Alexanderhighlights the demise of one independently owned restaurant in San Francisco, AQ, that will be shutting down later this month for all the same reasons.
When it comes to minimum wage, Alexander highlights that just a $1 per hour minimum wage increase can reduce an independent restaurant's already thin profit margins by $20,000, or 10%. So we imagine the $5 minimum wage hike that California just passed is probably slightly less than optimal for companies like AQ in San Francisco.
I should say before I go any further that all of the restaurant owners and chefs I've talked to are compassionate humans who support better coverage and livable wages, and seem on the whole progressive by nature, but restaurant margins are already slim as hell. There are no political agendas here -- they're just genuinely worried about how to afford to pay extra without radically changing the way they do business.
Let's start with the minimum wage. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, of the 2.6 million people earning around the minimum wage in 2015, the highest percentage came from service jobs in the food industry. Though the Obama administration's attempt to increase the federal minimum wage above $7.25 failed, 21 states and 22 cities have raised the minimum wage starting this year, including Washington, DC ($12.50 an hour), Massachusetts ($11), New York ($9.70), and Arkansas ($8.50).
Considering that hour-wage workers are usually the lowest earners and the increase is essential to ensure they earn an actual living, this is the least controversial of the newer expenses and something almost everyone in the industry supports, in theory, but it doesn't change the fact that it's an additional cost that must be factored in. If you have 10 hourly employees working eight-hour shifts, five days a week and you raise the wages a dollar an hour, that comes out to a nearly $20K increase on the year. In AQ's best year -- a phenomenal year by restaurant standards -- that would have been nearly 10% of profits.
And while California is certainly the poster child for misinformed liberal policies, as the Wall Street Journal recently pointed out, they're hardly alone in their implementation of a massive minimum wage hike in 2017.

Meanwhile, when it comes to Obamacare, Alexander notes that AQ was hit with an incremental $72,000 of annual expenses in 2015 that didn't exist in 2012, which eroded another ~30% of the company's peak net income.
Then there's health care. For the better part of its history, the restaurant business was a health care-free zone, which is ironic, given this Bureau of Labor Statistics' description of the back-of-house work environment: "Kitchens are usually crowded and filled with potential dangers." With the introduction of Obamacare, most restaurant workers finally got the coverage they've needed for years through the employer mandate, but critics often talk about the strain it puts on small-business owners due to a puzzling and controversial element that defines "full time" as 30 hours per week, and not the 40-hour workweek used almost everywhere else (the Save American Workers Act proposes to move this back to 40 hours).
Though this mainly affects bigger restaurants with staffs of 50 or more full-time workers, independent sit-down restaurants still need to provide suitable coverage (meaning it has to be affordable, less than 9.5% of the employee's income) or face fees of $2K per employee. Consider AQ. Semmelhack told me that in 2012 they paid $14,400 for health care costs. In 2015, they paid $86,400. That's an increase of $72K MORE per year than 2012, or 29% of their best year's profit.
Then there are those pesky rental rates which have been driven ever higher by nearly a decade of 0% interest rates that have resulted in artificially high demand for "yieldy" commercial real estate.
In the restaurant world, rent always sucks. Unless you manage to play it perfectly, as a restaurant owner you're either moving into a sketchy or "emerging" neighborhood where the rent is cheap but few want to go there, or you're overpaying for an established 'hood and need to be a runaway success from day one. And even if you do manage to make it in the former type of neighborhood, your success often ends up pricing you out of the 'hood you helped revitalize.
In Miami, Michelle Bernstein's Cena by Michy helped rebirth the MiMo historic district but was forced to close this year, after the landlord attempted to triple the rent. And even Danny Meyer had to close and move Union Square Cafe in New York, which, since 1985, had served as one of America's culinary landmarks, when he couldn't rationalize paying the huge rent hike the landlord proposed.
For all the reasons above, Alexander notes that "AQ will serve its last meal sometime in January, 2017"...an inconvenient fact that we're sure the liberal politicians in Sacramento will promptly ignore.
And while the publicly-traded restaurant companies have potentially started to take note of some of the risks above...

...the broader markets, which are also exposed to the same risks albeit to varying degrees, couldn't seem to care less.
 

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Central banks keep beating the stagflation drum.. draghi also been saying similar..

gold and gold stocks starting to warm up again..
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Fed's Kashkari says accommodative policy is appropriate | Article [AMP] | Reuters

Feb 7 (Reuters) - With the U.S. economy not yet at full employment, little risk of inflation surging and no immediate threat to financial stability, the Federal Reserve should keep rates moderately accommodative, Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari said on Tuesday.
"If we are to err, it is better to err on the side of being more accommodative than being more restrictive," Kashkari said in a statement released to explain his rationale for voting with all his Fed colleagues last week to keep U.S. interest rates steady.
Kashkari said that while markets are pricing in expectations for fiscal stimulus under President Donald Trump, he is not doing so in his own economic forecasts.
"Financial markets are good at some things, but, in my view, notoriously bad at forecasting political outcomes," Kashkari said.
ADVERTISEMENT

Inflation is showing signs of rising only slowly, labor cost growth is weak, and low inflation in other developed countries around the world make it unlikely that inflation will surge at home, he said.
The Fed currently targets short-term interest rates at between 0.5 percent and 0.75 percent, delivering a moderate level of accommodation, he said, adding, "This level of accommodation seems appropriate today given where we are relative to our dual mandate." (Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
 

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Here we go chaps. Prepare for sanctions and a trade war, (this Spratley Islands thing is the perfect vehicle for sanctions)

South China Sea: Tillerson says US should block China from new islands

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-38593034

China hits back at US over South China Sea claims

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38729207
Guess not. As usual, the Idiot Drumpf was all bark and no bite.

[h=1]Trump’s China Reversal: A Bully Backs Down[/h]FEB. 13, 2017
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10chinatrump-master768.jpg


President Xi Jinping of China in Lima, Peru, last year. The fact that President Trump and Mr. Xi had not talked since Mr. Trump took office in January had drawn increasing scrutiny.CreditCris Bouroncle/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesTo the Editor:
Re “After Silence From Xi, Trump Endorses the ‘One China’ Policy” (front page, Feb. 10):
Donald Trump’s recent exchange with President Xi Jinping in which Mr. Trump reversed himself and agreed to uphold the longstanding One China policy makes one thing painfully clear: the essential weakness of Mr. Trump’s character.
Like all bullies, he’s perfectly equipped to bluster and threaten, cheat and lie, so long as his intended victim is “weaker” than he is. Think of the contractors and architects he’s stiffed, the women he’s groped, the students at Trump University he’s conned, the refugees from a war-torn world he’s targeted — the list goes on and on.
But when he tries to bully someone smarter, stronger, meaner and more ruthless, and with actual experience in the rough and tumble world of international relations, he folds like a cheap tent.
JEAN SHERRARD
Seattle

 

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Markets now reaching pure insanity point..

UK data showing the squeeze that is coming as producer prices continue to heat up while consumer demand/growth not there.. US PPI data for Jan just came out all higher than expected..

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Market Drivers February 14, 2017
UK Inflation runs cold
ZEW misses
Nikkei -1.13% Dax -0.02%
Oil $53/bbl
Gold $1230/oz.

Europe and Asia:
GBP UK CPI 1.8% vs. 1.9%
EUR Flash GDP 0.4% vs. 0.5%
EUR ZEW 10.4 vs. 15

North America:
USD PPI 8:30
USD Yellen Testimony 10:00

The pound was clobbered in morning London trade today by weaker than expected CPI readings although producer price inflation rose at its fastest pace in 9 years.
GBP/USD dropped to a low of 1.2442 more than 100 points off the session highs after UK CPI reading printed at 1.6% vs. 1.8% eyed diminishing any expectations of a possible rate hike from BOE this year.
Consumer inflation remained well contained with clothing, furniture and transportation all showing declines. Producer price skyrocketed however, with core readings rising by 0.5% versus 0.3% eyed. ONS notes that factory gate inflation rose at its highest pace since 2008 with oil prices the main culprit for the increase.
Analysts have noted that it will only be a matter of time before inflationary pressures seep into consumer prices pushing UK CPI above the 2% BOE threshold. However, a close look at the data suggests a different explanation. The surprising decline in consumer prices may be a function of lack of demand, as the massive decline in purchasing power of the UK consumer due to exchange rate depreciation may be the reason for price declines on the consumer level. If that’s the case, UK producers will be squeezed in a vicious cycle of rising costs and falling demand which could have a negative impact on UK growth going forward.
In US today, all eyes will be on Janet Yellen as the Fed chief testifies in front of Congress. The consensus view is that she will maintain a positive outlook, reiterating that both the economy and wage growth continue to expand. However, the bull may be overestimating Ms. Yellen’s hawkish impulses. Given the great uncertainty surrounding fiscal policy and the general sense of political unrest in the country combined with declining consumer sentiment readings, the Fed chief is likely to err on the side of caution and reiterate that the FOMC will follow a gradual path. Most likely this will mean that the Fed will not consider another rate hike until June at the earliest.
USD/JPY which has floundered above the 114.00 failing to hold that figure since the start of the week could see some further selling if the market senses a more dovish tilt from Ms. Yellen. However, should she remain resolutely sanguine, the bull will quickly take control and USD/JPY could move towards the 115.00 level as the day proceeds.
 

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Build a wall! Make Mexico pay for it! Merica!

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Mexico Could Retaliate Against US Trade Via Corn

February 13, 2017
Mexico is ready to hit the U.S. where it hurts: Corn.
Mexico is one of the top buyers of American corn in the world today. And Mexican senator Armando Rios Piter, who leads a congressional committee on foreign relations, says he will introduce a bill this week where Mexico will buy corn from Brazil and Argentina instead of the United States.
USD_MXN_2017-02-13_1d_m.png
It’s one of the first signs of potential concrete action from Mexico in response to President Trump’s threats against the country.
“I’m going to send a bill for the corn that we are buying in the Midwest and…change to Brazil or Argentina,” Rios Piter, 43, told told CNN’s Leyla Santiago on Sunday at an anti-Trump protest in Mexico City.
He added: It’s a “good way to tell them that this hostile relationship has consequences, hope that it changes.”
American corn goes into a lot of the country’s food. In Mexico City, from fine dining restaurants to taco stands on the street, corn-based favorites like tacos can be found everywhere.

via CNN


 

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Build a wall! Make Mexico pay for it! Merica!

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Mexico Could Retaliate Against US Trade Via Corn

February 13, 2017
Mexico is ready to hit the U.S. where it hurts: Corn.
Mexico is one of the top buyers of American corn in the world today. And Mexican senator Armando Rios Piter, who leads a congressional committee on foreign relations, says he will introduce a bill this week where Mexico will buy corn from Brazil and Argentina instead of the United States.
USD_MXN_2017-02-13_1d_m.png
It’s one of the first signs of potential concrete action from Mexico in response to President Trump’s threats against the country.
“I’m going to send a bill for the corn that we are buying in the Midwest and…change to Brazil or Argentina,” Rios Piter, 43, told told CNN’s Leyla Santiago on Sunday at an anti-Trump protest in Mexico City.
He added: It’s a “good way to tell them that this hostile relationship has consequences, hope that it changes.”
American corn goes into a lot of the country’s food. In Mexico City, from fine dining restaurants to taco stands on the street, corn-based favorites like tacos can be found everywhere.

via CNN



I would venture to say it would be more costly to import corn from S.America not sure if Mexico wants to get into a trade war. Especially when we are the ones supplying/making the monopoly money. He should have never committed to them paying for it. Its nuts
 

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I would venture to say it would be more costly to import corn from S.America not sure if Mexico wants to get into a trade war. Especially when we are the ones supplying/making the monopoly money. He should have never committed to them paying for it. Its nuts

The main problem is Donald's mouth/twitter .. trade wars not good for both sides... and start cause rally around the flag authoritarian nationalists open their big mouths..

little whining or being a major loudmouth the last few days on twitter.. maybe/hopefully a start..

media got flynn booted

now more dirt coming out about campaign people with a lot of contact with Russians...

he wanted a war he got it! This is a completely different ballgame than running a business.. millions have their eyes on you and coming at you from every angle.. being a loud mouth narcissistic asshole is much much harder to pull off.. and only emboldens the millions of enemies looking to bring you down..
 

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Putin on the other hand one smart cookie.. albeit a evil narcissist himself.. that doesn't have confines such as the constitution Donnie has to deal with..

he got trump elected and now flexing his muscles..

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Russia deploys missile in apparent treaty violation

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[/COLOR]
Washington (CNN)Moscow has deployed a cruise missile in an apparent treaty violation, a senior military official told CNN Tuesday.

The move is just the latest in a string of Russian provocations in the early days of the Trump administration, which has called for warmer relations with the Kremlin.
The traditional US adversary has also positioned a spy ship off the coast of Delaware and carried out flights near a US Navy warship, concerning American officials. The administration has not officially drawn any links between the three events.
The ground-launched cruise missile seems to run counter to the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, the senior military official said. The New York Times first reported is deployment.
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160131165357-lindsey-graham-oct-31-large-169.jpg

Graham vows fight to last breath for sanctions 01:58

[/COLOR]

While declining to speak on intelligence matters, a spokesman for the US State Department did draw attention to Russian violations of the treaty.
"The Russian Federation remains in violation of its INF Treaty obligations not to possess, produce or flight-test a ground-launched cruise missile with a range capability of 500 to 5,500 kilometers, or to possess or produce launchers of such missiles," acting spokesman Mark Toner said in a statement issued Tuesday.
Russia is believed to have tested one such missile in 2014.
"We have made very clear our concerns about Russia's violation, the risks it poses to European and Asian security, and our strong interest in returning Russia to compliance with the treaty," Toner added.
Just last week, a US Navy warship in the Black Sea had three encounters with Russian aircraft Friday that were deemed to be unsafe and unprofessional because of how close the Russian planes flew to the US, according to a senior defense official.
The USS Porter, a guided-missile destroyer, was operating in the Black Sea when it was approached three times by Russian aircraft, including one IL-38 and two Su-24s. The Navy calculated the Russian planes may be have flown as close as 1,000 yards laterally from the ship and 1,000 feet over the water, but did not cross the deck of the Porter.
160210120322-uss-porter-large-169.jpg
The guided-missile destroyer USS Porter sails in the Black Sea in October 2015.




Moscow pushed back on the allegation Tuesday, with Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov telling Russian state media "there has been no incident on February 10th involving flybys of Russian military planes in the Black Sea next to USS Porter."
Meanwhile, a US defense official told CNN that the Russian spy ship, the SSV-175 Viktor Leonov, is sailing in international waters off the coast of Delaware. The vessel is outfitted with a variety of high-tech spying equipment and is designed to intercept signals intelligence. Fox News first reported on the ship's location.
The official noted that this is not the first time the ship has been deployed off the coast of the US. Similar patrols were carried out by the Leonov in 2014 off the coast of Florida and in 2015, adding that such missions were much more common during the Cold War.
The Russian cruise missile would be capable of threatening NATO's European members. Secretary of Defense James Mattis is due to visit NATO's headquarters to meet with his counterparts Wednesday.
"The INF Treaty eliminated an entire category of weapons that threatened Europe, in particular the threat of short-warning attacks. The treaty remains a key component of our security, and any Russian non-compliance is a serious concern for the alliance," a NATO official told CNN.
"NATO allies have the capabilities in place to ensure that Russia will not gain any military advantage from disregarding the INF Treaty," the official added.
The Kremlin's moves come the day after Trump's national security adviser, Michael Flynn, was forced to resign after failing to fully disclose conversations he had with Russia's ambassador to the US concerning US sanctions while he was not yet in office.
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The Cold War: Then and now 01:40

[/COLOR]

Trump has in the past expressed interest in arms reduction talks with the Kremlin and indicated he would seek a new opening with Moscow.
White House press secretary Sean Spicer, however, said Tuesday that, "The president has been incredibly tough on Russia."
Spicer pointed to UN Ambassador Nikki Haley's recent remarks on the Russia's actions in east Ukraine and occupation of Crimea, adding that Trump "expects the Russian government to deescalate violence in the Ukraine and return Crimea."
"At the same time he fully expects to and wants to be able to get along with Russia unlike previous administrations," he added.
In a Tuesday evening tweet, the Russian embassy in Washington said Russia "will continue to patiently explain to the new US administration why Crimea is Russia."
Trump himself, though, repeatedly praised Putin on the campaign trail as well as since being elected, while offering few if any criticisms.
Asked about sanctions against Russia, newly minted Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said Tuesday that sanctions were an important tool but would not specify any intensions towards Russia.
"Our current sanctions programs are in place, and I would say sanctions are an important tool that we will continue to look at for various different countries. But it's a very important program within the Treasury Department," Mnuchin said.
In contrast, Sen. Tom Cotton, an Arkansas Republican, called for a strong response to the cruise missile.
"If the last administration showed us anything, it's that ignoring these kinds of provocations simply means they will proliferate," he said in a statement. "I've said before we need to set firm boundaries for Russia's behavior -- and enforce them to the hilt. I take this news as evidence that the US should build up its nuclear forces in Europe."

CNN's Ivan Watson and Michelle Kosinski contributed to this report.
 

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Satire.. but...

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Putin Starting to Wonder If His Puppets Are Smart Enough to Pull This Off


Andy BorowitzFebruary 14, 2017
PHOTOGRAPH BY MIKHAIL SVETLOV / GETTYMOSCOW (The Borowitz Report)—Russian President Vladimir Putin is “starting to get concerned” that the puppets he installed in the executive branch of the U.S. government “might not be up to the task at hand,” sources confirmed on Tuesday.
According to the sources, the flameout of the national-security adviser Michael Flynn was only the most recent event that has caused Putin to wonder if the figureheads he propelled into office are “just too dim-witted” to serve the goals of the Russian Federation.
“When you choose a puppet, you’re looking for a sweet spot,” one source close to Putin said. “You want to choose someone who’s dumb enough to be manipulated, but not so dumb that he can’t find the light switches.”
“Increasingly, it looks like we missed that sweet spot,” the source said.
Putin is reportedly willing to have a “wait and see” attitude with his current puppets, but, if things do not improve markedly, he will not hesitate to “make some changes,” the source said.
“President Putin knew that this bunch didn’t have a lot of experience in government and that there were bound to be some growing pains,” the source said. “But geez.”


 

bushman
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You should read slightly more than the CNN side of any story Tiz, lol

“All of our flights were conducted and are being conducted over the neutral waters of the Black Sea in accordance with international rules and safety requirements,” the general added.
Konashenkov was surprised to hear the US military were astonished to see Russian fighters so close to Russian borders.
“If the US destroyer, as the Pentagon official claims, conducted a 'regular' patrol mission in the vicinity of Russia, tens of thousands miles away from their own shores, it is strange to be surprised about the no less regular flights of our aircraft over the Black Sea,” said the representative of the Ministry of Defense.
https://www.rt.com/news/377363-russia-black-sea-flyby-porter/
 

bushman
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As far as missile violations are concerned the US has been playing footloose and fancy free with that treaty for decades, here's their most recent violation

tsk tsk tsk

 

bushman
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If the US tried to pull the same BS with China WW3 would have started years ago

How would CNN react to Russian MK41 vertical rocket launchers being installed in Cuba?

Not well would be my guess...lol
 

bushman
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WW3 hasn't started yet for one reason only, because the Russkies are so tolerant
 

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