10/4/25: Belarus: Between a Rock and a Hard Place, or Playing Games?


What is Aleksandr Lukashenko up to now?

Lukashenko (R), Cozying Up To Putin . . .
. . . and Schmoozing Trump

Despite being known as “Europe’s last dictator”; and despite his record of brutal authoritarianism since assuming the presidency of Belarus in 1994; and despite the questionable legitimacy of his subsequent re-elections; and despite his willingness to allow his country to be used as a staging ground for Russian troops and armaments in pursuance of Putin’s war against Ukraine . . . despite all of that, we now see Lukashenko openly making overtures to the U.S. But to what end?

In mid-August, as Donald Trump was en route to his now infamous meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska, he took the time to speak by phone with Lukashenko — the first-ever such conversation for the Belarusian leader. In a social media post following that call, Trump, believing that Lukashenko might be of help in U.S.-Russian negotiations concerning the war in Ukraine, referred to the long-ostracized dictator as “highly respected President” — even though officially the West does not recognize Lukashenko as the legitimate president of his country. [Artyom Shraibman, Carnegie Politika, August 21, 2025.]

Trump also expressed appreciation for the release of 16 prisoners (though not referring to them as “political” prisoners), and agreed to meet with Lukashenko in person at some unspecified time . . . even saying he would come to Belarus with his family. Trump’s objective was said to be the release of additional prisoners being held in Belarus, who may number as many as 1,300 in total. [Id.]

U.S. Special Envoy John Coale

Four weeks later, on September 11th, Lukashenko met with U.S. envoy John Coale in Minsk, where Coale handed him a letter from Trump, written in English and signed simply “Donald.” At that time, Lukashenko announced that he was ready to make a deal on the release of prisoners, saying:

“If Donald insists that he is ready to take in all these released prisoners, God bless you, let’s try to work out a global deal, as Mr. Trump likes to say, a big deal.” [Marina Bobrova, Reuters, September 11, 2025.]

Coale referred to Trump’s letter, and the first-name-only signature, as “a rare act of personal friendship.” [Id.]

Later that day, Belarus released 52 prisoners of various nationalities, who then traveled to Lithuania with the U.S. negotiating team.

His Usual Signature

Again, Trump’s intentions may be twofold, and perfectly legitimate: seeking the release of as many prisoners as possible, and trying to use Lukashenko’s presumed influence with Putin as leverage in negotiations to end the war in Ukraine.

But what is Lukashenko really up to? Is he merely currying favor to improve his standing in the international political hierarchy? Or is he growing weary of being under Putin’s thumb and genuinely turning Westward?

It has now come to light that on September 10th, as an estimated 700 Russian drones entered Belarusian airspace en route to the Polish border, a Belarusian military officer — not for the first time — used a dedicated phone line to call his Polish counterpart and warn him. And a similar call was made to military officials in neighboring Lithuania as well. [Mike Eckel and Andnrei Shauliuha, RFE/RL, October 3, 2025.]

In addition, there have been unconfirmed reports that a number of those drones have been shot down by Belarusian defense forces, though most have gone unreported by official sources. [Id.]

Now, that seems certain to infuriate Vladimir Putin. So why risk it?

Worth the risk?

I certainly don’t have the answer to that. But Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, the exiled leader of Belarus’ opposition party — whose husband Syarhei is himself a recently-released political prisoner of Lukashenko — warned that the dictator is trying to fool Trump with gestures such as the release of a handful of prisoners, in exchange for which Trump has already eased some sanctions against Belarus.

While expressing appreciation for having won the recent prisoner releases, Tsikhanouskaya cautioned the U.S. “not to pay too much” for the relatively small number of people freed thus far. Noting that Lukashenko’s brutal crackdowns and mass arrests are continuing in what she called a “revolving door,” she urged that the U.S. should continue working to free prisoners while the opportunity presents itself, saying that:

. . . “people are dying in prisons. That’s why we need . . . consistent and irreversible changes, not to let this regime to take more and more and more hostages to sell them for higher price [sic].” [Michael Weissenstein, AP, September 25, 2025.]

Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya

Again, it all boils down to a question of trust . . . and Aleksandr Lukashenko is a man who has proven many times over that he cannot, under any circumstances, be trusted. One possible scenario is that he is doing Putin’s bidding — playing up to Trump to gain an easing of sanctions or other favors that would ultimately be of benefit to Russia, if only indirectly.

In the meantime, we can only hope that Trump’s common sense — if he still has any — will for once outweigh his ego’s susceptibility to flattery.


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
10/4/25

10/4/25: Did You Know . . . ?

. . . that during a government shutdown, Congress continues to receive full pay and benefits?

As of October 1st, “non-essential” government employees were furloughed, without pay, for an indefinite period of time . . . until the Senate makes up its collective mind as to whether it’s okay to render medical insurance unaffordable for millions of low- to middle-income Americans.

As for the “essential” federal workers, they continue to work . . . but also without pay. This is because all of those loyal employees — legislative assistants, administrative assistants, maintenance workers, cafeteria workers, national park rangers, etc. — are paid in accordance with a budget that has to be renewed annually.

But Congressional members’ salaries are governed by Article I, Section 6 of the U.S. Constitution. And since 1983, they have been funded by a permanent appropriation outside of the annual budget.

(Credit: Cartoon by Joe Heller)

So, while they sit and haggle over our current and future well-being, and send hundreds of thousands of people home without a source of income — and with the threat of permanent dismissal hanging over their heads, thanks to Donald Trump and OMB director Russell Vought’s latest diabolical scheme — those Senators have no clue as to how we feel when we have to wonder how long we’ll be able to put food on the table, make tuition and car payments, or hold onto our homes.

Thanks a lot, Congress. We’ll remember you at election time.


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
10/4/25

10/3/25: Twice Burned by ICE

It isn’t just the lives they’ve destroyed by stalking and arresting innocent people. It isn’t even just their trashing of the U.S. Constitution. Now it’s also the trickle-down effect of their storm-trooper tactics.

By allowing masked agents, some even in civilian clothes, to grab people from their homes, their jobs, their schools, their places of worship, or simply off the streets, Donald Trump has now effectively created a new genre of criminality: ICE impersonators.

The Real Thing

Grab a gun and a mask, act like a tough guy, shout “ICE,” and you’re free to attack, rob, even kidnap innocent people at will. And all of the witnesses and CCTV footage in the world will be unable to identify you.

Since the start of this year, at least two dozen cases of people impersonating immigration officers have been revealed. These range from verbal intimidation of immigrants to actual violent crimes; and the victims have no way of determining whether their attackers are actually government agents.

California’s Governor Gavin Newsom last month signed a bill — the first in the U.S. — banning agents from wearing masks during operations in his state. But the White House declared the California law unconstitutional, and has said that ICE will not abide by it. [Alexandra Banner, CNN’s 5 Things a.m., October 3, 2025.]

California Governor Gavin Newsom

So let me get this straight: It is now “unconstitutional” to outlaw an act that is itself blatantly unconstitutional . . . right?

What the hell . . . ??!!!


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
10/3/25

10/3/25: As DOGE Moves On, OMB Moves In

We all know who this is . . . and we know that he left Washington in even worse condition than he found it.

Elon Musk: The First Warning

Now meet the man who is picking up where Musk left off: Russell Vought, Director of the Office of Management and Budget.

Russell Vought: Pledging to Defend the Constitution – February 2025

Did I hear a chorus of voices asking “Who?” . . . or perhaps it was “So what?” that echoed throughout the hall. Who really cares about the government’s chief bean-counter?

Well, we should all care. Because, although his position does not earn him a place in the presidential cabinet, his department — the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) — is the largest one within the Executive Office of the U.S. President, and reports directly, and only, to the President.

According to the White House website, the OMB “ . . . serves the President of the United States in overseeing the implementation of his vision across the Executive Branch. Specifically, OMB’s mission is to assist the President in meeting his policy, budget, management and regulatory objectives and to fulfill the agency’s statutory responsibilities.”

Official Seal of OMB

In the current administration, that makes him Donald Trump’s #1 Lackey. And that is a position that carries with it a whole lot of power.

Now, that might be a good thing if the position were held by a clear-thinking, law-abiding, red-blooded American who might be able to rein in an out-of-control tyrant with a raging God complex. But Vought is cut from the same cloth as Trump, and is not just a puppet doing his boss’ bidding, but is on a long-term power trip of his own.

His history, both professional and political, is too lengthy, too complex, and too disturbing to reiterate here. For that, I urge you to peruse the article by Phil Mattingly and Jeremy Herb titled “Trump’s shutdown architect: Russ Vought’s plan to deconstruct the government was years in the making,” [CNN, October 2, 2025].

Most recently, however, as Congress fought over a budget for 2026 and the government headed toward a shutdown, Vought was busy preparing a 622-word directive that completely ignored and overrode all of the contingency plans from previous years.

This time, in the event of a shutdown, every federal agency would be required to submit detailed plans for mass layoffs.

Those plans would take immediate effect, and would only be shelved if Democrats agreed to a Republican funding measure they had already voted to reject. [Mattingly and Herb, CNN, id.] [Bold emphasis is mine.]

CNN Photo

Thus, Vought — together with Trump’s willing Republican toadies in Congress — will have conspired to place the blame for the government’s closure on the Democrats who have fought to safeguard the rights and protections afforded Americans by the Constitution.

While Musk’s DOGE was focused on his astronomical budget cuts, Vought has quietly been jockeying into a position enabling him to dismantle the entire federal bureaucracy, becoming Trump’s go-to instrument of deconstruction and destruction.

And part of their plan involves another huge swath of layoffs — estimated by some administration officials to be as many as 300,000 by the end of the year — as punishment for the Democrats’ refusal to cave in to pressure to pass the Republicans’ budget by the end of the fiscal year.

We hear quite a lot about Vance, Rubio, Hegseth, Bondi, Kennedy, and Trump himself. But sometimes it’s the quiet ones who are most treacherous, and whom we should be watching most closely.


*. *. *

Through all of the agony of the last eight months, as I have witnessed my beautiful country being gutted by a cabal of rapacious, power-mad, uber-wealthy Draculas in modern guise, I have been haunted by one question that seems to me to have no logical answer:

Once they have achieved their goal of dismantling a government that has worked well for 250 years, breaking the country’s ties with all of its long-time allies, destroying its environment and infrastructure, and enslaving its populace . . . what will they have won?

And the only picture that comes to my mind is this:


But who will be left to rebuild it for them?

Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
10/3/25

10/3/25: Hey, Elon . . . Is Mars Open Yet?

If you want to know why I’ve been feeling like this lately . . .


. . . consider just three of yesterday’s headlines:


Russia cut power to defunct Chernobyl nuclear plant,
Ukraine says” (AFP)


and

Putin says Russia will respond swiftly if it thinks
Europe is provoking it” (Reuters)


and

“Munich Airport closed after wave of drone sightings,
officials say” (CNN)

*. *. *

And I haven’t even touched on the continuing mayhem right here in the United States.

Is it any wonder I’m ready to pack my bags and move to another planet? If only it were possible.

Just beam me up, Scotty.

Star Trek (C. 1960s)

Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
10/3/25

10/2/25: Another Day, A Different Kind of War

Back in 1972, when the United States was still mired in the hugely unpopular war in Vietnam, actress and anti-war activist Jane Fonda was ostracized for visiting communist North Vietnam, where she was photographed seated on a tank and spoke out against U.S. involvement in the conflict. Thereafter labelled “Hanoi Jane,” many accused her of treason, while others lauded her anti-war outspokenness at a time when organized protests against our involvement were rampant.

Jane Fonda in North Vietnam – C. 1972

Fonda survived the years of castigation, and has never changed her “peacenik” views. She followed in the footsteps of the many Hollywood acting legends, such as Henry Fonda (her father), Lucille Ball, Humphrey Bogart, Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland, and others who had formed a Committee for the First Amendment 25 years earlier to combat the excesses of McCarthyism.

Hollywood Comes to Washington – C. 1947

And now Fonda is bringing back their Committee in hopes of combatting the enemy in yet another internal war against the illegal, unconstitutional actions of an extreme right-wing administration in Washington.

Calling this “the most frightening moment of my life,” she shared with CNN a letter she has written to the Hollywood community, asking her peers to join her:

“I’m 87 years old. I’ve seen war, repression, protest, and backlash. I’ve been celebrated, and I’ve been branded an enemy of the state. But I can tell you this: this is the most frightening moment of my life.

“When I feel scared, I look to history. I wish there were a secret playbook with all the answers — but there never has been.”
[Elizabeth Wagmeister, CNN, October 1, 2025.]

Jane Fonda – 2025

She continued, underscoring the importance of solidarity and “binding together, finding bravery in numbers too big to ignore, and standing up for one another.

“That’s why I believe the time is now to relaunch the Committee for the First Amendment — the same Committee my father, Henry Fonda, joined with other artists during the McCarthy era, when so many were silenced or even imprisoned simply for their words and their craft.

“The stakes are too high, and silence is too costly. They’re betting on our fear and our silence. But our industry — and artists around the world — have a long history of refusing to be silenced, even in the darkest times.” [Id.]

Thus far, more than 550 Hollywood notables have joined the Committee, including Barbra Streisand, Glenn Close, John Legend, Rob Reiner, Rosie O’Donnell, Sean Penn, Spike Lee, Whoopi Goldberg . . . and too many more to name. In a statement by a spokesperson for the Committee, they said that Fonda’s hope was to address “the onslaught of attacks on free speech from the current administration” by putting on a “united front against government censorship, intimidation, and fear.” [Id.]

The statement continued:

“Free speech and free expression are the inalienable rights of every American of all backgrounds and political beliefs — no matter how liberal or conservative you may be. The ability to criticize, question, protest, and even mock those in power is foundational to what America has always aspired to be.” [Id.]

Constitution of the United States

Back in 1972, I wasn’t sure how I felt about “Hanoi Jane.” On the one hand, I admired her courage in speaking out for her convictions; while on the other hand, I did not approve of her visit to North Vietnam.

But that was a different era, and a different fight. You have to give props to an 87-year-old who still, half a century later, stands by her beliefs, and has the courage to fight the good fight.

And what she believes in is a United States of America that adheres to the principles of the founding fathers who drafted and signed the Constitution that has stood us in such good stead for nearly 250 years.

I can’t fault her for that.

Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
10/2/25

10/2/25: Yes, Folks … Sometimes It’s Good To Be Fat

If you’re an Alaskan brown bear, being obese is not only a good thing; it’s absolutely essential to getting you through the long winter’s hibernation. And if you’re really motivated, and eat your weight in salmon before heading into Lullaby-Land, you might even be the winner of the annual (since 2014) Fat Bear Week contest.

I won’t keep you in suspense. This year’s winner was none other than bear No. 32, better known — appropriately — as Chunk.

Meet Chunk (a.k.a “Chunk the Hunk”)

In the week-long lead-up to the big finale, the 12 contenders were followed by camera around Alaska’s Katmai National Park and Preserve while their online fans voted for their favorites. Chunk’s chances of victory were threatened when he sustained a jaw injury — possibly during a mating season fight with another testosterone-laden competitor — that could have affected his ability to satisfy his other voracious appetite (for salmon). But he persevered, until finally the voting narrowed the contestants down to the winner and runner-up: Chunk and Bear 856 (who doesn’t seem to have a nickname).

Weighing in at around 1,200 pounds, Chunk defeated Bear 856 by a final tally of 96,350 votes to 63,725 — a majority that even Donald Trump would have difficulty challenging. [Phil Helsel, NBC News, October 1, 2025.]

So he (Chunk, not Trump) starts out the winter season with enough excess avoirdupois to allow him to snore his way happily through to spring. And the people of Alaska — not to mention the tens of thousands of voting fans around the world who find the contest un-bear-ably adorable — have their new champion for the 2025-26 season.

Nighty-Night, Chunk

But before Chunk lumbers into his cave for that long winter’s nap, I would like to offer him this word of encouragement:

Never mind what Pete Hegseth says; on you, fat is a good look!


Sweet dreams, big guy.

Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
10/2/25

10/1/25: The Feenstra Kids Are Growing Up

An online peek at the Feenstra family in Nizhny Novgorod today revealed that those eight beautiful children are growing up quickly, as children are inclined to do. Not only are the littlest ones already helping with the farming chores . . .

“Helping” Mom and Dad
A Little Maddie Mischief

. . . but the two eldest — teens Cora and Wes — were given a day off to strike out on their own, traveling by bus to a nearby town for some sightseeing. And of course, they documented the adventure for their viewers . . . until their phone battery died.

First was a stroll through a church or monastery — they weren’t sure which — and its gift shop and nearby outdoor souvenir kiosks:

The Church
The Gift Shop
Souvenirs for the Tourists

Next was a visit to a nearby orphanage, where they were not allowed to meet the children or photograph the surroundings, but they said that it was “clean” and the staff were very pleasant and helpful.

(Note: Having provided food to orphanages in the Moscow area some 30 years ago, I would like to have learned more about the way they operate now; but I’m not surprised at the reticence of the workers.)

Finally, there was a stop for pizza (what . . . no pirozhki ???) before heading back to the bus. But it seems they dawdled a bit too long, and the last bus had left. After trying unsuccessfully to find another bus or a taxi to take them home, and having no way to charge their phone, they found a helpful stranger who let them use their phone to call home. And then it was Dad to the rescue.

So the first solo (or duo) adventure of Cora and Wes, while there were a couple of glitches, at least was not a disaster. They showed maturity and ingenuity when they got themselves into a tight spot, didn’t panic, and proved themselves worthy of the trust their parents had placed in them. Perhaps next time they’ll remember to bring along a phone charger.


It appears that the Feenstras of Saskatchewan are adapting well to their chosen home in Russia. Here’s hoping they continue to thrive . . . and to have access to YouTube and their other social media. I would hate to lose track of them now, when I’ve grown so attached to them.

In the Beginning

Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
10/1/25

10/1/25: We Said, They Said

While the White House hasn’t yet announced a final decision, JD Vance said this week that, as a result of Vladimir Putin’s continuing refusal to discuss a ceasefire in Ukraine, Donald Trump has indicated he might consider acceding to Ukraine’s request for long-range Tomahawk cruise missiles that could conceivably reach Moscow and most of European Russia if fired from Ukraine.

Moscow Kremlin

Encouraged by that possibility, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warned Kremlin officials that they should “know where the bomb shelters are.” [Guy Faulconbridge, Dmitry Antonov and Mark Trevelyan, Reuters, September 29, 2025.]

That was one threat the Kremlin could not shrug off. In an indication that Putin has given the matter considerable thought, spokesman Dmitry Peskov tossed these questions at reporters when asked for comment:

“The question … is this: who can launch these missiles …? Can only Ukrainians launch them, or do American soldiers have to do that? Who is determining the targeting of these missiles? The American side or the Ukrainians themselves?” . . . adding that “a very in-depth analysis” was required.

Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov

And Andrei Kartapolov, head of the Russian Parliament’s Defense Committee, said that any U.S. military specialists who aided Ukraine in launching Tomahawks against Russia would then become legitimate targets for Moscow. “And no one will protect them. Not Trump, not [special envoy Keith] Kellogg, nor anyone else,” he said. [Id.]

To which Kellogg replied that, according to Trump, Kyiv should now have the ability to conduct long-range strikes on Russia, adding:

“Use the ability to hit deep. There are no such things as sanctuaries.” [Id.]

U.S. Special Envoy to Ukraine and Russia, Keith Kellogg

In a show of defiance and confidence in Russia’s ultimate victory, Peskov had one further comment:

“Even if this happens, there’s no panacea that can change the situation on the front for the Kyiv regime right now . . . And whether it’s Tomahawks or other missiles, they won’t be able to change the dynamic. [Id.]

And finally — never to be outdone — the world heard from Kremlin super-hawk Dmitry Medvedev with one additional threat, proclaiming that Europe “simply cannot afford a war with Russia . . . [but that] the possibility of a fatal accident always exists.” [Id.]

Dmitry Medvedev

*. *. *

While Trump’s realization that coddling Putin wouldn’t work was long overdue, this verbal escalation is far too reminiscent of the Kennedy-Khrushchev exchanges during the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. Toe-to-toe confrontations such as these demand the application of patient, experienced diplomacy on both sides. Vladimir Putin has both the experience and the patience.

But who from our side can match him?

Seriously Outclassed

*. *. *

And this is me, going to sleep tonight:


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
10/1/25

9/30/25: First the Military, Then What … the Gestapo?

The extent of the danger created by forgetting, ignoring or denying history cannot be overemphasized. There are already legions of Holocaust deniers who disavow the hard evidence and the testimony of the few remaining survivors. And with the aging and inevitable passing of the generation of people who lived through the years of World War II and witnessed its horrors, we are more at risk than ever of being unable to identify the warning signs of creeping fascism.

But the signs are already here.

Adolph Hitler – Addressing the Troops, C. 1940s

And they’ve never been more clear than they were this morning at Marine Base Quantico in the Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., when Donald Trump and self-styled “Secretary of War” Pete Hegseth addressed a mandatory gathering of some 800 top-ranking military officers for an “urgent” meeting that could (and should) have been handled remotely.

“Secretary of War” Pete Hegseth and “Commander-in-Chief” Donald Trump – Quantico, Virginia, September 30, 2025
The Captive Audience – Quantico, Virginia, September 30, 2025

Dragging the heads of military commands away from their assigned posts around the world — at taxpayer expense, of course — accomplished two things: First, it left those vital posts, for about three days including travel time, in a condition of vulnerability in the absence of their top brass. And second, by gathering in one place 800 of our military’s upper echelon, together with the head of the Defense Department and the occupant of the Oval Office, it created a doomsday scenario — the perfect target for terrorists and other would-be mass murderers.

Oh, and I did mention those tax dollars stolen from essential programs to finance this little pep rally, didn’t I?

But did anything substantive come out of this all-important briefing of our most experienced warriors by a draft-dodger and a failed TV personality?

Well, there was Trump’s puzzling revelation — apparently just tossed into the mix for no particular reason — that:

“I’m very careful when I walk down stairs, like I’m on stairs … I walk very slowly. Nobody has to set a record. Just try not to fall because it doesn’t work out well.” [Rex Huppke, USA Today, September 30, 2025.]


I’m sure all of the Generals and Admirals in the audience appreciated receiving that bit of intelligence: Trump is an old man who tends to lose his balance.

But then he got into his favorite topic: the “decriminalization” of the country:

“We’re under invasion from within. No different than a foreign enemy, but more difficult in many ways because they don’t wear uniforms. At least when they’re wearing a uniform you can take them out.” [Id.]

“Taking them out” seems to be his newest delight: immigrants, alleged Venezuelan drug runners, anyone who looks suspicious. It doesn’t seem to matter.

And he added that he had told Hegseth:

“We should use some of these dangerous cities as training grounds for our military, National Guard, but military. Because we’re going into Chicago and it’s a big city with an incompetent governor, stupid governor.” [Id.]

On the Streets of Los Angeles

As always unable to resist a good campaign moment, he then took the opportunity to try — for the zillionth time — exorcising his greatest demon, former President Joe Biden:

“You’ll never see four years like we had with Biden and that group of incompetent people that ran this country.” [Id.]

The man is possessed.


Finally, Trump yielded the floor to Hegseth, who can’t seem to forget that he is no longer a TV personality, and launched into the importance of optics above all else:

“Frankly, it’s tiring to look out at combat formations or really any formation and see fat troops. Likewise, it’s completely unacceptable to see fat generals and admirals in the halls of the Pentagon and leading commands around the country and the world. It’s a bad look.” [Id.]

Rallying the Troops

I wonder — did he ever suggest to Trump that his medically-diagnosed obesity is also a “bad look”? Somehow, I doubt it.

Because Trump then followed up on the whole “let’s pretty up” theme with this:

“I am a very aesthetic person. I don’t like some of the ships you’re doing aesthetically. They say, ‘Oh, it’s stealth.’ … That’s not stealth. An ugly ship is not necessary in order to say you’re stealth.” [Id.]

Right — let’s gold-plate all those warships and planes, hang a few gilt-framed portraits of Trump and some crystal chandeliers in prominent spaces, and make ours the most aesthetically-pleasing military in the world.


*. *. *

But embarrassing stupidity aside, the underlying message of the day was this: We’re going to be using our American cities as training grounds for the military, thus killing two birds with one stone . . . the second bird being the American public itself, as it becomes accustomed to living under martial law.

You see, folks . . . the signs are already there.


Just sayin’ . . .

Brendochka
9/30/25