Author Archives: brendochka39

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About brendochka39

Having a wonderful time reminiscing about all my past travel (and other) adventures. Hope you’ll share them with me in my blog, “All Roads Led to Russia.”

5/11/25: Putin’s Hostages: Bring Them Home, Week 70: A Hostage’s Brother Gets Added To the List

Unfortunately, there is a new name to be added this week.

In December of 2021, Ihar Losik, a blogger and contributor to RFE/RL’s Belarus Service, was convicted on multiple charges, including the “organization and preparation of actions that grossly violate public order,” and sentenced to 15 years in prison. He is presumed to be somewhere in a Belarusian prison, though he has not been heard from in about two years . . . one of Putin’s hostages, courtesy of Belarusian president Aleksandr Lukashenka.

Ihar Losik

And now word has been received that Losik’s younger brother, Mikita Losik, has also been arrested in Belarus on extremism charges related to Russia’s war against Ukraine. [RFE/RL, May 9, 2025.]

Mikita Losik

Twenty-five-year-old Mikita was detained in mid-April and accused of “assisting extremist activity,” for allegedly sending photographs of Russian military equipment movements to a now-defunct independent Telegram channel known as Belaruski Hayun. He is said to be in jail in the northeastern city of Vitebsk, Belarus. [Id.]

Belaruski Hayun, which shut down in February of this year, was engaged in monitoring military activity in Belarus — a country closely allied, politically and militarily, with Russia. The head of the channel has said that Belarusian authorities hacked into a database and gained access to information about its contributors, resulting in the arrest of a number of people on similar charges. [Id.]

And so it goes in Belarus, as in Russia, where independent media are not merely discouraged, but are actively being destroyed.

Aleksandr Lukashenko

Now, as we await the outcome of Mikita Losik’s arrest — no doubt a trial, followed by a guilty verdict and prison sentence — we must add his name next to his brother’s on our hostage list.

*. *. *

And, as always, we pay tribute to all of Putin’s prisoners who have fallen victim to his totalitarian regime:

The Azov 12
David Barnes
Ales Bialiatski (in Belarus)
Gordon Black
Andrei Chapiuk (in Belarus)
Antonina Favorskaya
Konstantin Gabov
Robert Gilman
Stephen James Hubbard
Sergey Karelin
Ihar Karney (in Belarus)
Vadim Kobzev
Darya Kozyreva
Artyom Kriger
Uladzimir Labkovich (in Belarus)
Michael Travis Leake
Aleksei Liptser
Ihar Losik (in Belarus)
Mikita Losik (in Belarus)
Daniel Martindale
Farid Mehralizada (in Azerbaijan)
Nika Novak
Marfa Rabkova (in Belarus)
Igor Sergunin
Dmitry Shatresov
Robert Shonov
Eugene Spector
Valiantsin Stafanovic (in Belarus)
Siarhei Tsikhanouski (in Belarus)
Laurent Vinatier
Robert Romanov Woodland
Vladislav Yesypenko (in Crimea)
Yuras Zyankovich (in Belarus)

. . . and any others I may have missed.

Stay strong, and never give up hope.


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
5/11/25

5/10/25: Now, That’s Solidarity!

The meeting referenced in my earlier post today took place in Kyiv, with around 30 world leaders attending. Most participated virtually; but four risked their lives by traveling to the war-torn capital in person: Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer, France’s President Emmanuel Macron, Germany’s Chancellor Friedrich Merz, and Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk.

Standing Tall: Tusk, Starmer, Mrs. Zelenska, Zelensky, Macron, and Merz

Ukrainian President Zelensky stated that achieving a ceasefire is the main goal: “First that, then everything else.” [Id.]

In a news conference following the talks, U.K. Prime Minister Starmer said: “All of us here, together with the US are calling Putin out,” and warned that it is time for Russia to show that they are “serious about peace.” [Rorey Bosotti, Henry Zeffman and Frank Gardner, BBC News, May 10, 2025.]

And Starmer added, in discussing additional coordinated sanctions and other measures to be taken against Russia:

“Putin, of course, cannot be trusted. There are sanctions in place at the moment, they are already having an impact on the Russian economy so by further co-ordinating sanctions on oil, on fossil fuels, etc. will make a material difference.” [Id.]

*. *. *

The talks were followed by a call to Donald Trump, who is said to have reiterated his support for the ceasefire. Zelensky described the call as “positive and concrete”:

“We share a common view: an immediate, full, and unconditional ceasefire is needed for at least 30 days . . . [but they’re] waiting for Russia’s response. Once the ceasefire begins, there will be the best moment for diplomacy. Ukraine is ready for meetings and negotiations in any format.” [Id.]

The Call to the U.S.

And they didn’t have long to wait for that response. The Kremlin has quickly dismissed the threat, with the following message from spokesman Dmitry Peskov:

“We hear many contradictory statements from Europe. They are generally confrontational in nature rather than aimed at trying to revive our relations. Nothing more.

“It is very difficult to isolate a country like Russia because we take a very large part of the globe. But this is not the main thing. The main thing is that Russia actively develops relations with a large number of countries in all directions where they have interest in developing cooperation with our country. And we will continue doing so.” [Id.]

Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov

Or in other words — as so eloquently stated in a social media post by Deputy Chairman of the Russian Security Council Dmitry Medvedev — “Shove these peace plans.”

Well . . . we’ll see about that.

Thirty Against One

Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
5/10/25

5/10/25: The Newest Category of Refugees


Would you like to know how I feel at this moment? Well, I’ll tell you anyway. I feel like putting my fist through a wall . . . only I’m too sane to actually do it. I need both of my hands.

But total, helpless frustration is the best description for my mood today. And it’s all because 54 people have been granted refugee status in the United States.

Am I anti-immigration? Absolutely not! This country was built by immigrants, including my own grandparents. Those who have come here legally over the past two centuries have made America the beautiful, diverse, successful “melting pot” that it is.

So what is it about these 54 people that has me so pissed off? Just this: they are not “your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free” that are inscribed on the Statue of Liberty. They are not fleeing desperate poverty, criminal gangs, or religious persecution.

They are, in fact, white South Africans. Afrikaners. The very people who themselves — or whose parents and grandparents — watched their black neighbors beaten, tortured, and imprisoned under their country’s system of apartheid not that many years ago.

South African Victims of Racial Discrimination?

And now they claim they are in need of refuge from alleged racial discrimination.

SERIOUSLY??!!!

An executive order signed by Donald Trump on February 7th of this year read as follows:

“The Secretary of State and the Secretary of Homeland Security shall take appropriate steps, consistent with law, to prioritize humanitarian relief, including admission and resettlement through the United States Refugee Admissions Program, for Afrikaners in South Africa who are victims of unjust racial discrimination.” [Kate Barlett, NPR, May 8, 2025.]

In a most unusual move, a press conference is being planned for the group’s arrival next week at Dulles Airport, to be attended by high-level officials from both the State Department and Homeland Security. They have, in an exceptionally short period of time, been granted P1 refugee status, which, according to the State Department, is given to “individual cases referred by designated entities to the program by virtue of their circumstances and apparent need for resettlement.” [Id.]

There is no identification of the “entities” by whom they were referred, or why these 54 were chosen out of all the thousands who might be in the same circumstances.

This also places them on the path to U.S. citizenship, and renders them eligible for government benefits — the very benefits that American citizens are now in fear of having taken away from them by DOGE’s massive defunding.


Those who do not have relatives in the U.S. have been told they will be placed in a location that has a local organization to provide them with support. A document seen by NPR read, in part:

“Your case manager will pick you up from the airport and take you to housing that they have arranged for you. This housing may be temporary (like a hotel) while a local organization helps you identify more long-term housing. . . . You are expected to support yourself quickly in finding work. Adults are expected to accept entry level employment in fields like warehousing, manufacturing, and customer service. You can work toward higher level employment over time.” [Id.]

Well, there go a few dozen jobs that could be filled by American citizens.


And what circumstances have led to these lucky people receiving the red-carpet treatment? According to Donald Trump, Marco Rubio, and South African-born Elon Musk (now, there’s a coincidence for you!), Afrikaners — many of whom are farmers — face persecution in South Africa. Trump says the South African government is guilty of “doing some terrible things . . . they are confiscating land, and actually they’re doing things that are perhaps far worse than that.” [Id.]

“Perhaps?” I don’t suppose you could be a bit more specific, could you?

Well, let’s see. The South African government has passed a new land reform bill, but thus far no land has been confiscated, and “expropriation without compensation” would only occur in rare instances. In fact, the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa provides, in Section 25 headed “Property,” that:

“(1) No one may be deprived of property except in terms of law of general application, and no law may permit arbitrary deprivation of property.”

And in response to Trump’s allegations of discrimination, the South African Department of International Relations had this to say:

“It is ironic that the executive order makes provision for refugee status in the U.S. for a group in South Africa that remains amongst the most economically privileged, while vulnerable people in the U.S. from other parts of the world are being deported and denied asylum despite real hardship.” [Id.]

Wow! They took the words right out of my mouth.

Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
5/10/25


5/10/25: While Moscow Partied, the West Worked Toward Peace

Yesterday was Vladimir Putin’s biggest day of the year: Victory Day — the 80th anniversary celebration of what Russians call “their” victory over Hitler’s Axis powers in 1945. And from all reports, it was a roaring success.

Red Square – May 9, 2025

But not everyone came to the party. China’s President, Xi Jinping, was there, of course . . . seated next to Putin in the viewing stand in front of the Kremlin wall in Red Square. And leaders from other Putin-friendly nations attended, despite fears of possible drone attacks by Ukraine (which didn’t happen), and detours necessitated by the refusal of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia to permit the visiting dignitaries’ planes to fly through their air space en route to Moscow. But only one EU country — Slovakia — was there, represented by its Prime Minister, Robert Fico, as was EU-hopeful Serbia’s President, Aleksandar Vucic. The rest of the West stayed at home.

The Western leaders weren’t idle, however. They were busy scheduling meetings to be held today, May 10th, in Kyiv, with some attending virtually. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that leaders of the “Coalition of the Willing” — a group of Western nations pledged to continue defending Ukraine against Russia — will be in attendance. According to British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, the group will include, in addition to himself, French President Emmanuel Macron, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, and President Zelensky. [Ivana Kottasova, CNN, May 9, 2025.]

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer

Starmer said that the group’s purpose is to “ratchet up pressure on Russia’s war machine” until Putin agrees to a ceasefire.

The United States has not been excluded from these talks. Both Zelensky and Macron have spoken with Donald Trump several times, and Macron commended Trump on “his strong call for an unconditional 30-day ceasefire.” He added in a statement on X:

“We must all work towards this goal without delay, false pretenses, or dilatory tactics. Ukraine has already expressed its support for such a ceasefire nearly two months ago. I now expect Russia to do the same.”

And further, he said that if Russia should fail to accept the proposal, France was “ready to respond firmly, together with all Europeans and in close coordination with the United States.” [Id.]

French President Emmanuel Macron

Calls were also placed to both Zelensky and Trump on Thursday by the leaders of ten northern European countries — the United Kingdom, Denmark, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Iceland, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and Finland — that form a security alliance known as the Joint Expeditionary Force (JEF). According to Sweden’s Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson:

“Our message to both presidents was that we are committed to a just and lasting peace in Ukraine. We also conveyed our full support for the proposal for a 30 days ceasefire and continued European and US commitment to the peace process.” [Id.]

*. *. *

It is encouraging to finally see the leaders of the European nations that are most at risk from Putin’s aggression working in concert with the United States, instead of arguing over who should step forward to take principal responsibility. They need to stop Putin’s endless stalling tactics and force him to sit down to serious peace negotiations . . . starting with a meaningful ceasefire. And that can only be accomplished through a solid, united front. Let’s hope today’s meetings will prove to be the beginning of that process.

Still, it all depends on the reaction of this guy, doesn’t it?


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
5/10/25

5/9/25: Its Victory Day in Moscow


And what a day it has been!

A Rehearsal for the Big Day: A Tribute to the 1940s

In an extravaganza reminiscent of the displays of power favored by the leaders of the Soviet Union, Russia hauled out its finest military armaments, including Yars missile systems, tanks, armored personnel carriers, and — for the first time — a column of trucks carrying combat drones. And after an absence of two years, there was a traditional fly-by of military aircraft over Red Square.

Despite heavy security prompted by fears of possible attack by Ukrainian drones, and travel difficulties caused by the refusal of neighboring Baltic states Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia to permit travel of arriving foreign dignitaries over their air space, an estimated 27 world leaders friendly to Vladimir Putin were in attendance.

First among equals was, of course, China’s Xi Jinping, who sat beside Putin on the reviewing stand and wore a symbolic Russian orange-and-black St. George ribbon. Xi had brought with him more than 100 Chinese soldiers, who marched in the parade on Red Square . . . a sign of the burgeoning partnership between the two countries.

Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin: BFFs Once More

Chinese Troops in Red Square

There were also military contingents from North Korea, Vietnam and Mongolia . . . though the North Koreans did not march in the parade, despite having sent thousands of troops to fight alongside Russian forces in Ukraine. Perhaps their presence would have been too great a reminder of the “special military operation” still taking place in Ukraine — reference to which was expressly forbidden during the ceremonies.

There was, however, a post-parade hug between Putin and a North Korean officer representing his government in the absence of Kim Jong Un . . . who was said to have symbolically participated by visiting the Russian Embassy in Pyongyang.

The Big Hug

Not unexpectedly, other leaders who accepted Putin’s invitation to the party included Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil; Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro; Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi; and Mahmoud Abbas, President of the Palestinian Authority. One surprise guest was Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, whose country has applied for EU membership and who, by attending the festivities in Moscow, placed his nation at risk of forfeiting that membership.

Also risking censure was Robert Fico, Prime Minister of Slovakia — the only EU member in attendance, who has made no secret of his friendship with Putin.

The main event in Red Square began with the arrival of 11,000 troops, led by their commander, Oleg Salyukov, and an inspection by Defense Minister Andrei Belousov. Putin’s address followed, in which he said that Russia “was and will be an indestructible barrier against Nazism, Russophobia, antisemitism. Truth and justice are on our side . . . the entire country, society and people support the participants” [of the war in Ukraine]. [Jessica Rawnsley and Paul Kirby, BBC News, May 9, 2025.]

Red Square – May 9, 2025

How interesting that Putin should have made that rather oblique reference to the war — something that he had declared verboten for others. But, being able to pick and choose what to promote as “facts” is one of the privileges of rank.

For example, he claims that Ukraine is now controlled by neo-Nazis who allegedly ousted a Russian-friendly president 11 years ago and now persecute Russian speakers in eastern Ukraine. [Mike Eckel, RFE/RL, May 9, 2025.]

He also accuses the United States and NATO of aggression for having admitted former Warsaw Pact members such as Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic. In his comments today, he countered Donald Trump’s remarks of two days ago that “victory was mostly accomplished because of [the United States], like it or not. We came into that war. We won that war.” [Id.]

In rebuttal, Putin said: “We [Russians] remember the lessons of World War II, and we will never agree with distortion of its events, with attempts to justify the executioners and slander the real winner. Truth and justice [are] on our side. The entire country, all of society, the people support the participants of the special military operation.” [Id.]

*. *. *

It never stops, does it? They’re like a couple of kids running a race, each declaring he crossed the finish line first, neither one willing to accept the fact that they both ran a damned good race.


The truth of the matter is, World War II was won by the Allied forces — all of them. Without the U.S. joining the fray in 1941, the fate of Europe might have taken a completely different turn. And without the Soviet Union opening up the Eastern front, the ending might also have been quite different. We all worked together then, against a common enemy . . . and the good guys won.

And then it all went to hell in something called the Cold War.

Sir Winston Churchill, Harry Truman and Josef Stalin

We never learn, do we?

Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
5/9/25

5/9/25: My Nominee for Federal Office


Are there any positions remaining to be filled in the upper echelon of the Trump administration? Or anyone about to be the first to quit or be fired? If so, I have the perfect candidate to fill the slot:

Meet . . . the Blue-Footed Booby.

Blue-Footed Booby

It doesn’t matter which position is open; qualifications for the job aren’t important. At least, they haven’t been so far this year. And this Booby at least looks alert, possibly even intelligent, and raring to go. And he’s seriously cute.

It’s true that he would have to be imported from the Galapagos Islands, but I’m sure ICE would find a way to waive the new immigration restrictions for this guy, if the boss tells them to. I mean, if they can do it for white South African “asylum seekers” . . .

In fact, I think I already have the perfect spot for him: Surgeon General of the United States. I know Donald Trump has someone else in mind — a dropout doctor and current “wellness influencer,” seller of medical devices and supplements, and practitioner of something called “functional medicine.” Her name is Casey Means. Together with her brother, Calley Means, she published “Good Energy” — a book that supposedly became popular with Trump campaign staffers and with that most notable of snake-oil salesmen, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. [Liz Essley Whyte, Wall Street Journal, May 7, 2025.]

According to her Wikipedia profile, her medical license has been inactive since 2024. But no matter.

Casey Means

While Means did manage to get through Stanford University, she dropped out of her surgical residency, saying she was frustrated by what she considered medicine’s “inability to treat patients’ underlying, chronic causes of ill health.” She achieved some prominence after being interviewed by the likes of Tucker Carlson and podcaster Joe Rogan. She says that “The system is rigged against the American patient to create diseases and then profit off of them.” [WSJ, op.cit.]

Not surprisingly, her views are sometimes in conflict with those of public health officials, including her questioning of the safety of vaccines (though not publicly identifying as an anti-vaxxer). Consider, for example, her comments on the efficacy of raw milk:

“When it comes to a question like raw milk, I want to be free to form a relationship with a local farmer, understand his integrity, look him in the eyes, pet his cow, and then decide if I feel safe to drink the milk from his farm.” [Id.]

So . . . meet a farmer, pet a cow, ignore proven scientific research, become Surgeon General. The new fast track to success.


But — and call me crazy, if you like — somehow I’d feel safer in the hands (or wings) of a Blue-Footed Booby, rather than a couple of screwball human ones.


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
5/9/25

5/8/25: The World Is Not Underwear


There are some things we change daily. Underwear comes immediately to mind.


And, while perhaps not daily, it’s a good idea — and sometimes just fun — to make small changes to our routines . . . maybe a different breakfast cereal, a more scenic route to work in the morning, or a new hair style.

But the world map is not underwear. It’s not cereal, or a haircut. Yet Donald Trump keeps trying to remake it as though it were his own plaything.

First it was renaming the Gulf of Mexico, calling it — for whatever reason (ego? a power trip?) — the Gulf of America. As though Mexico doesn’t matter.


*. *. *

Then he said the U.S. should simply take over Gaza and turn it into another Trump-themed playground for the world’s rich and famous. As though the Palestinians don’t matter.


*. *. *

He’s also in favor of renaming the Persian Gulf, instead calling it the Arabian Gulf, or Gulf of Arabia. As though the entire history of the Achaemenid (Persian) Empire never mattered.


*. *. *

He’s threatening to steal Greenland from Denmark. Clearly, the lives of the Greenlanders don’t matter . . . to him.


*. *. *

He keeps trying to persuade Canadians that they’d be better off as part of the United States. Fat chance there!


*. *. *

He wants to reclaim the Panama Canal Zone on the spurious ground that he’d be protecting it from a takeover by China. Excuse me?


*. *. *

And with all of that, I have to wonder . . . could this be next:

The United States of Trumplandia?

*. *. *

Sorry, but my only reaction is . . .

“What the f*ck??!!!”

Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
5/8/25

5/8/25: Plumbing the Depths of a Shallow Mind

You’d think it would be fairly simple to understand a person’s thinking on a subject as straightforward as a strong country’s unprovoked attack on another, weaker country, followed by more than three years of death, destruction, and sadistic brutality.

But I do believe that even Dr. Freud would be banging his head against the wall and screaming in frustration, trying to second-guess Donald Trump’s next move as he attempts to mediate a settlement of Russia’s war against Ukraine.

Dr. Sigmund Freud

In all fairness, Trump himself has to be going half-mad from the failure of his efforts to deal with Vladimir Putin’s capriciousness, his outrageous demands, his twisting of facts, and his pig-headed refusal to give an inch in what he calls his desire to negotiate. Trump’s maintaining a public aura of toughness with someone he’s actually trying desperately to appease . . . well, that can’t be easy, even for one who is himself so inherently duplicitous.

But this back-and-forth, up-and-down, hot-and-cold, reactive method of persuasion is clearly not working. One day he offers Putin concessions — a return to the G7, lifting of sanctions, telling Ukraine to forget NATO. The next day, when the attacks on Ukraine continue, or when Russia breaches its own unilateral “Easter ceasefire,” Trump says he’s losing patience, and threatens to up the ante by invoking further sanctions. And so it continues.

Until yesterday, when JD Vance — who, of course, is speaking on behalf of Trump — reiterates one of their earlier threats: a withdrawal from negotiations in order to force Russia and Ukraine to deal directly with each other. At an event in Washington, he said:

“You don’t need to agree with Russian justification of the war, but you need to understand where they are coming from — making them talk of what it takes for them to end the war. [The] Russians are asking for [a] certain set of things, and we think they are asking too much. The step we need to take right now is we need Russia and Ukraine to start talking to one another. We think it’s probably impossible for us to mediate the whole process fully without at least some direct negotiations.” [RFE/RL, May 7, 2025.]


Well, that’s nothing new. Or is it? Note the last sentence: “We think it’s probably impossible for us to mediate the whole process fully without at least some direct negotiations.”

“Impossible”? For Donald Trump, the presidential candidate who promised — not only the American people, but the entire world — that he would end the Russia-Ukraine war within 24 hours of taking office? For the man whose self-proclaimed infallibility never permits the thought of “impossibility” to enter his mind?

Is he truly giving up? Or is it just another idle threat . . . a ploy that he hopes will convince Vladimir Putin that it’s time to be realistic and make a couple of concessions to bring his bloody battle to an end?


To the outsider, however, there sometimes is such a thing as an impossibility . . . and fathoming Donald Trump’s mercurial decision-making is one of those things.

Vance did have it right when he spoke of the “need to understand where they [the Russians] are coming from.” But one thing is very clear, and that is, that Trump has no grasp of the workings of Vladimir Putin’s mind . . . or of the Russian psyche in general. Nor do any of his emissaries: Marco Rubio, JD Vance, Pete Hegseth, Steve Witkoff, or any of the other businessmen he has appointed to play the roles of seasoned diplomats.

All of their billions of dollars combined cannot buy them the one thing they lack: On-the-ground experience.

And Vladimir Putin knows it.


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
5/8/25

5/7/25: The Reemergence of Mike Pence


You remember Mike Pence. He was Donald Trump’s Vice-President during the first Trump administration, always supportive and loyal to his boss . . . until that fateful day on January 6, 2021, when right-wing extremists attacked the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to overthrow the government.

Pence was in the Capitol that day, along with his wife and daughter, and came very close to losing his life at the hands of that mob. He knew it wasn’t a peaceful demonstration, as Trump alleged . . . and still does.

January 6, 2021 – U.S. Capitol, Washington, D.C.

Even before that day, Trump had been pressuring Pence to use his constitutional authority over the counting of electoral college votes to attempt to overturn the outcome of the 2020 election . . . you know, the one that Trump still claims he won. Delusion is a terrible thing.

But Pence knew that his first loyalty was not to an individual who just happened to occupy the Oval Office, but to the Constitution and the people of the United States. And so he refused to obey that order. For that, he has just received the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award, and deservedly so.

Mike Pence

In an interview with CNN’s Kaitlan Collins the day after receiving the award, Pence lauded the bravery of the U.S. Capitol Police officers who fought off the attackers and secured the building on January 6th. He recalled hearing some of the rioters chanting, “Hang Mike Pence,” and says that “None of [the officers] flinched. Their courage, their bravery, should be heralded for generations to come, because they secured the Capitol and allowed us to reconvene the veery same day and complete our work under the Constitution.” [Eric Bradner, CNN, May 5, 2025.]

He went on to say:

“I was deeply disappointed to see President Trump pardon people that engaged in violence against law enforcement officers that day. The president has every right under the Constitution to grant pardons, but in that moment, I thought it sent the wrong message.” [Id.]

And he made some tactful, but clearly critical, remarks about policies of Trump’s second administration with which he strongly disagrees, including onerous tariffs, the selection of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., as Health and Human Services Secretary, and Trump’s “wavering support for Ukraine.” [Id.]


And then he added this:

“Whatever the future holds for me, I’m going to try and be a consistent voice for those conservative values that I think are not only the right policy for the Republican Party, but I think they’re the best way forward for a boundless future for the American people.” [Id.]

“Whatever the future holds for me . . .”

Maybe I’m wrong, but those sound to me like the words of a man considering a run for office. In light of the other options presently out there, the Republican party could do worse . . . though a lot can change in a couple of years. We shall see.


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
5/7/25

5/7/25: Romania: The Next Domino To Fall?


It has been 35 years since the Berlin Wall fell and Eastern European countries began, one after another, casting off the yoke of the Soviet occupation.


Since then, an entire generation has been born and matured . . . a generation that never knew the horrors of living under communism. But what about their parents? Have they forgotten what it was like, or how desperately they fought — and how many lives were lost — in order to break free?

It seems impossible that their memories could be so short. Yet there are those who are turning back to that era . . . leaning so far to the political right that they are electing governments friendly to Vladimir Putin, despite the ever-increasing repressions of his regime.

There is Belarus’ presumptive President, Aleksandr Lukashenko; Hungary’s Prime Minister, Viktor Orban; Slovakia’s Prime Minister, Robert Fico; and now, it appears that Romania is set to elect right-wing Eurosceptic George Simion, who just won 40.9% of Sunday’s vote and is favored to win a run-off vote on May 18th.

George Simion

Is it coincidence that these people have come to power while Putin is demonstrating more and more clearly his goal of reasserting Russia’s hegemony over those parts of Eastern Europe that were once contained within the USSR’s Eastern Bloc? How much simpler would it be for him if those countries voluntarily submitted to his influence, saving him the trouble and expense of additional “special military operations” like the one currently underway in Ukraine?

It’s already well known that Lukashenko in Belarus has been Putin’s puppet for years. Given Russia’s history of election interference in countries throughout the world, it seems far more likely that Hungary, Slovakia and Romania are falling victim to the same sort of “peaceful invasion” . . . a coup by ballot, so to speak . . . without a shot being fired.

It’s insidious; it’s clever; and it’s working. And with all three countries maintaining membership in NATO, the EU, and the Schengen Zone, it’s a serious problem.


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
5/7/25