Archive for May, 2017

Venezuelan YouTuber starts video series describing ‘my socialist hell’ – TheBlaze.com

A Venezuelan YouTuber known asCarlos Gaio released a video Monday that he says will turn into a series titled My Socialist Hell.

In the video, Gaio goes into detail about the conditions he is currently living in within the failing country of Venezuela. Currently,Venezuela is suffering from a shortage of almost everything, from food, to medicine, to something as simple as toilet paper.

Gaio begins by saying that his government is not actually a government, it is more accuratelya dictatorship. He says they are running the country as a socialist one, but as Gaio says if you take a look at history, socialism never worked.

Take a look at the USSR. Take a look at Romania, says Gaio. Take a look at all the eastern European countries that were run by socialism during the 70s and 80s. They dont have these forms of government anymore.

Gaio, 31, goes on to tell the viewer that he was an English teacher who has been unemployed since December 2015. The former teacher says that finding a job is very difficult in the countrys current economic state, as they cannot pay for anymore employees. To make money, Gaio says he taught privately, but this is only a temporary solution, and maybe even a fruitless gesture as the Venezuelan currency the bolivar is practically worthless.

Gaio hopes that these videos will help him raise money in order to be able to escape the country, and move somewhere where he can have a normal life.

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Venezuelan YouTuber starts video series describing 'my socialist hell' - TheBlaze.com

Patton Oswalt Rips Tea Party Radio Host For Criticizing Jimmy Kimmel’s Tearful Statement – TheWrap

(Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

Jimmy Kimmel has been roundly praised for his emotional speech on his show last night, in which he defended the Affordable Care Act after describing how his newborn son required open heart surgery last week to stay alive.

But Joe Walsh, former Illinois Congressman and current right-wing talk show host, wasnt moved, tweeting this response:

Also Read: Jane Goodall Warns Ivanka Trump She's 'In a Position to Do Much Good or Terrible Harm'

Walshs response drew a lot of ire from Obamacare supporters, but none more so than Patton Oswalt, who brought up a scandal from Walshs past that many of the radio hosts critics are quick to use against him.

Also Read: Trump Has a Split Personality on Free Speech Rights, Experts Slam 'Hypocrisy'

During Walshs term in the House of Representatives from 2011-2013, the Tea Party politician was sued for $117,000 in unpaid child support by his ex-wife. The two settled the lawsuit out of court, agreeing afterwards in a statement that Joe is not and was not a deadbeat dad and does not owe child support.

Still, the lawsuit was used in attack ads against Walsh during his 2012 re-election campaign, which he lost to Democrat Tammy Duckworth. Then, about a month after Walshs term ended, the child support issue surfaced again amidst reports that he sought a reduction in his required child support payments due to his employment being terminated through no voluntary act of his own.

Regardless of what his settlement statement said, the deadbeat dad label has been chasing Walsh for years, and his put down of Kimmels speech prompted another round of such clapbacks.

Also Read: Trump's Tweets Are Losing Popularity - Sad!

Also Read: Jimmy Kimmel Thanks Fans With Family Photo After Revealing His Newborn Son's Heart Surgery

Kimmel returned to Jimmy Kimmel Live on Monday night after abruptly taking a week off from the show. He explained his absence in a tearful speech recounting how he discovered shortly after the birth of his second child that the newborn required immediate open heart surgery and would require several more surgeries over the next several years of his life.

The late-night host went on to point out that while he and his wife could easily afford the cost of these surgeries, less fortunate families facing the same situation may not have been able to afford the medical procedures necessary to keep their child alive.

We were brought up to believe that we live in the greatest country in the world, Kimmel said. But until a few years ago, millions and millions of us had no access to health insurance at all. You know, before 2014, if you were born with congenital heart disease, like my son was, theres a good chance youd never be able to get health insurance, because you had a pre-existing condition. And if your parents didnt have insurance, he added, You may not even live long enough to get denied because of your pre-existing condition.

If your baby is going to die and it doesnt have to, it shouldnt matter how much money you makeNo parent should ever have to decide if they can afford to save their childs life. It just shouldnt happen. Not here.

Late-night TV is in the midst of a renaissance era, afire with jokes about President Donald Trump during his first 100 days in office. Take Seth Meyers, who discussed Trump's first "100 Dayz and Confused," taking a closer look at his unfulfilled promises. He called Paul Ryan by the wrong name and assailed POTUS' plethora of tweets.

Trevor Noah summarized the first week of Trump's presidency, highlighting his infatuation with Fox News and the creation of his own untrue reality.

Following Trump's first press conference, Colbert waded through a mess his responses. Trump got "Devos-ified" and the late-night host ribbed POTUS' gripes over "very fake news" reporters.

Fallon pulled out his famous Trump impression for a segment on his "YUUUGE" wheel of decisions that explain the president's erratic actions.

Using Kellyanne Conway's favorite phrase, Kimmel delivered his version of alternative facts and Trump's need to see a "C-I-A-chiatrist" (you know, a psychiatrist who deals in anxiety brought on by fears of Central Intelligence Agencies).

Alec Baldwin, Kate McKinnon and Beck Bennett won laughs in this "Saturday Night Live" skit that featured POTUS, Steve Bannon and Angela Merkel.

One of John Oliver's most successful segments highlighted the serious problem of "a president capable of standing in the rain and saying it was a sunny day."

In this Conan O'Brien segment, Trump asks Obama for advice on the press, tweeting toilets and his Valentine's Day plan with Putin.

Trevor Noah covered the annual White House Easter Egg Roll -- highlighting Trump forgetting to place his hand on his heart and Steve Bannon's transformation into the Easter Bunny.

Colbert discussed Trump's frequent trips to Mar-a-Lago -- or as he likes to call it, his "timeshare in crazy-town" -- and his accompanying Twitter freak-outs.

After the "in-ugh-uration" and the international shows of solidarity at the Women's March, Meyers covered reactions to the "most popular president since Obama."

In this "SNL" segment, Baldwin as POTUS makes an appearance on the People's Court and battles with the judges of the ninth circuit.

Kimmel compiled footage from several of Trump's meetings of him "moving stuff around"-- and it's funnier than it sounds.

Samantha Bee's coverage of Trump's "hard power budget" criticizes the massive cuts to education and ignorance about climate change, calling Trump's America "figurative hell... might as well make it literal hell too."

There has been no shortage of material when it comes to POTUS

Late-night TV is in the midst of a renaissance era, afire with jokes about President Donald Trump during his first 100 days in office. Take Seth Meyers, who discussed Trump's first "100 Dayz and Confused," taking a closer look at his unfulfilled promises. He called Paul Ryan by the wrong name and assailed POTUS' plethora of tweets.

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Patton Oswalt Rips Tea Party Radio Host For Criticizing Jimmy Kimmel's Tearful Statement - TheWrap

Russia’s grip on Europe’s oil supply threatens Ukraine’s energy independence – The Independent

The fields around Grabova and Debaltsave came to international attention as the crash site of Flight MH17, the MalaysiaAirlines aircraft Ukraines separatists were accused of shooting down. But along the roads, on the scarred landscape, is another reminder of the civil war, one which continues to pose a great problem for the government in Kiev.

These are coal mines which are now in the Russian sponsored Donetsk Peoples Republic, lost to Ukraine. To the south Crimea, annexed by Moscow, is another piece of territory lost, and with it has gone a maritime zone with underwater energy resources, which analysts say may rival the North Sea.

To the west the town of Slovyansk, scene of bitter fighting not long ago, sits part of the countrys shale gas reserves of 1.2 trillion, the third largest in Europe, yet reserves which have remained largely unexplored due to the strife.

All this has contributed to Ukraine facing an energy crisis which makes it dependant on gas from Russia with a source of friction over the terms of trade to add to the bitter political enmity between the two states.

It is not just Ukraine which is dependent on Moscow for energy, but a lot of Western Europe. One reason Boris Johnsons recent attempt to toughen sanctions against Vladimir Putins government so abjectly failed was because of the thirst of German industry for supplies from the east.

An international conference in Houston, Texas, starting on Wednesday will examine how Ukraine can become energy self-sufficient and, in the future, can even start exporting to the West.

Ukrainian companies and the government of Petro Poroshenko insist this is something highly achievable. Vadym Pozharskyi, advisor to the board of directors of The Burisma Group, the countrys largest private gas concern, said:A major part of our objective, our strategic goal in the coming years is energy independence.

The fact is that the energy sector is a key source of revenues for the Ukrainian budget, we are not only providing the country with domestic gas, but also investing billions in production and state of the art exploration and drilling technologies.

Of course Ukraine lost sources of energy in the east, but there are other sources with significant potential.

Mr Pozharskyi continued: Wehave always encouraged the government and market players to reform the gas market based on European best practices. It is absolutely crucial that market players, infrastructure investors and also Ukraines international partners see our country as a reliable partner if we are to reach that potential.

Allegations of corruption and inefficiency continues to bedevil Ukraine four years after the Maidan protests overthrew the government of Putin ally Viktor Yanukovych. Burismaand other companies in Ukraines private energy sector complain that the gas regulator had imposed bureaucratic restrictions which is hindering the aim of self-sufficiency.

But Burisma has also been involved in court proceedings with its president, Nikolay Ziochevski, a former government minister, facing criminal charges over alleged misappropriation of assets. However, after two lengthy trials,in Britain, where the assets were held, and Ukraine, the charges were dismissed.

The company hired a former US District Attorney General, John Buretta, as counsel. He is among a number of Western figures with ties to the company including Hunter Biden, the son Joe Biden, the former US vice-president and Joseph Cofer Black, an ex- director of counterintelligence at the CIA.

Mr Buretta wanted to point out that the High Court in London and the court in Kiev had totally exonerated Mr Ziochevski of charges.He said: I have extensive experience with assessing allegations of corruption, both from the government side while serving in the Department of Justice, and from the private side.I have served as an expert witness in proceedings outside the USin such matters and have handled a broad range of matters for companies and individuals involving various countries.

Regardless of the country, it is important that prosecutors follow the law and the evidence the law and evidence dictates; then the rule of law flourishes.

Final report on downing of MH17 in Ukraine due

While Burisma and Ukrainian gas companies try to drive the country towards self-sufficiency and a future exporter, there is acrimony within the EU over Russian gas. Berlin has publicly acknowledged the need to be less reliant on Moscow, but, at the same time, it is engaged with the Nord Stream 2 project which will pipe Russian gas from the Baltic to Germany.

This has led to protests from member states in eastern Europe. Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydlo maintained this project is not an economic one, its a geopolitical one.But Nord Stream 2 is going ahead.

Moscow remains convinced that its strategic advantage, asymmetric interdependency, will continue. As a member of the silovki, the officialdom of the security sector,declared recently:Russia can live at least one year without any European investment and technology. But Europe cannot survive for even 30 days without Russian gas.

Read more:
Russia's grip on Europe's oil supply threatens Ukraine's energy independence - The Independent

He fought with Russian-backed militants in Ukraine. Now he’s a U.S. … – Washington Post

A prominent militant who fought with Russian-backed separatists in Ukraine and participated in far-right European politics recently completed U.S.Army training and is serving in an American infantry division in Hawaii, according to Army and other records.

Guillaume Cuvelier, 29, shipped for basic training in January and graduated as an infantryman at Fort Benning, Ga., the records show. In a short exchange with The Washington Post, Cuvelier confirmed that he was actively serving in the U.S. Army.

With his well-documented history of espousing extreme right-wing views andhisrole in an armed group backed by a U.S. adversary, Cuveliers ability to join the Army raises questions about the recruitment process and whether applicants are thoroughly screened before they are able to enlist.

Born and raised in France as a dual French and American citizen, Cuvelier spent his formative years alongside French ultranationalists before picking up a Kalashnikov in eastern Ukraine in 2014, according to social media posts, a documentary in which he was featured, and accounts from people who knew him.A year later he fought with the Kurdish peshmerga in northern Iraq before coming back to the United States.

Following inquiries by The Post, the military has begun an inquiry to ensure the process used to enlist this individual followed all of the required standards and procedures, said Kelli Bland, a spokesman for the U.S. Armys recruiting command, in an email.

In Ukraine, Cuvelier, also known asLenormand, fought for the Russian-backed Donetsk Peoples Republic, the breakaway state subject to U.S. governmentsanctions and labeled terrorist by the U.S.-allied government in Kiev. Cuveliers service with the group appears to be in direct violation of a March 2014 executive order that was applied to the republic that June. The order prohibits U.S. citizens from assisting by way of funds, goods or services, any of the sanctioned entities covered by the order, opening up Cuvelier to possible federal prosecution.

The U.S. Army often forbids those who display extremist views or actions from entry, said Lt. Col. Randy Taylor, a spokesman for the Armys Department of Manpower and Reserve Affairs, in an email. Taylor added that if an Army official determines an applicant has the potential for meeting Army standards, the official may in exceptional cases allow those who have overcome mistakes and past conduct, made earlier in their lives, to serve their country. However, in many cases a history of gang or extremist activity is disqualifying.

Cuvelier said he has changed.

The [U.S.] army is my only chance of moving on and cutting with my past, Cuvelier said in a text message. I realized I like this country, its way of life and its Constitution enough to defend it.

By publishing a story on me, you are jeopardizing my career and rendering a great service to anyone trying to embarrass the Army. My former Russian comrades would love it. so, I please ask you to reconsider using my name and/or photo.

As a dualcitizen, Cuvelier would be subject to more extensive background checksif he hadsought an Army position requiring a security clearance, but he did not need one as an infantryman, Bland said. If Cuvelier had no outstanding criminal activity in the United States and didnt discuss his past, there would have been no reason to bar him from enlisting, she added.

Cuvelier grew up in Rouen, France, and graduated from university there in 2009, according to his Facebook profile, which has since been deleted. His younger brother, Gabriel Cuvelier, said in a series of texts that his family isfairly complicated, without providing details, but that Cuvelier had always been kind and peaceful and never sought attention.

Online documentsshow Cuvelier was an active member in the Party of France, a political body that splintered from Marine Le Pens National Front, in 2010. Jean-Yves Camus, a French analyst who studies the far-right and has tracked Cuvelier, compared the Party of France to an American white-nationalist groupcalled National Vanguard.

Cuvelierwas also part of the neo-fascist group Troisime voie and an identity movement called the Young Identitarians, according toAnton Shekhovtsov, a visiting fellow at the Institute for Human Sciences in Vienna, who focuses on right-wing movements across Europe and has written extensively about the Ukraine conflict.

Cuveliers younger brother couldnt explain how his older sibling first got involved with Frances far right, but said his views led him to meet people.

I believe that when he was in France, he sort of saw that no honest way of going about politics was possible, so he decided to take action differently, the younger Cuvelier said in a text. Thats all I can say.

Upon arriving in Ukraine in the middle of 2014, Cuvelierhelped start a French-Serbian foreign fighter unit called the Unit Continentale. The groups manifesto on itsFacebook pagestates that NATO is a terrorist military alliance and that France is a slave of the American Empire. The groups views are based on an ideology called continentalism espoused by the anti-Western Russian political scientist, Alexander Dugin. The groups page also has multipleposts from July and August 2014 that solicited donations directly to Cuveliers bank account in France.

Russia embodies a power. A power of resistance, what we want to bring back to the West. A society structured around tradition, family, patriotism, Cuvelier says, explaining his motives for joining the separatists during the 2015 documentary titledPolite People.

Cuvelier eventually split from Unit Continentale, according to the documentary on Western militants who joined the fight in eastern Ukraine. In the film, Cuveliers band of fighters adopts the nameTeam Vikernes after the Norwegian black metal artist, self-proclaimed Nazi and convicted murderer,Varg Vikernes.

Videos posted on the Team Vikernes page show its members firing around the Donetsk airport, the site of a bloody close-quarters fight between Ukrainian troops and separatists in the winter of 2014. Cuvelier declined to answer any questions about his service in eastern Ukraine and when pressed overa series oftext messages said, I was never really in DPR. It was a hologram. He declined any further comment.

In the documentary, there is a still picture of Cuvelier with a medal pinned to his chest standing shoulder to shoulder with Igor Girkin (who was the commander of the separatists during the summer of 2014). It appears in the documentary that Cuvelier may have been honored with the medal in Moscow in 2015.

Girkin has beensanctioned by the U.S. Treasury for his role with the separatists and on a Russian radio talk showadmittedto having looters executed. He is also accused in a U.S. lawsuit of orchestrating the shoot-down of Malaysian Airlines flight MH 17 over Ukraine in July 2014, killing nearly 300 people.

Following his time in Ukraine, Cuvelier traveled to northern Iraq in 2015 and set up another unit of foreign fighters, this time allied with the Kurdish Peshmerga.

The group, called Qalubna Makum, was located near Daquq in northern Iraq from the end of 2015 to mid-2016.

Rick Findler, a U.K.-based photographer who followed Qalubna Makum for 10 days said, They thought they could just show up with guns and start fighting. Instead they just sat in a room for months.

The Peshmerga eventually forced Cuvelier to leave Iraq after anincident in which he wasaccused of beating an American volunteer with a rifle, according to Heloisa Jaira, a Peshmerga medic, who treated the victim.

Weeks later, he arrived in the United States.

Andrew Roth in Moscow contributed to this report.

Read more:
He fought with Russian-backed militants in Ukraine. Now he's a U.S. ... - Washington Post

TRAVEL DIARY: UKRAINE, PART I – Norwich Radical (blog)

by Rob Harding

Yeah, its another one of these. Might as well. These days the local news is moving so fast, and so depressingly, that Id rather talk about Eastern Europes most recent frozen conflict and a three-decade-old nuclear disaster zone.

Day 1: As we depart for the airport, my companion alerts me that the US has just dropped a massive bomb in Afghanistan and is now threatening to fight North Korea.This is fine

Lviv is one of Ukraines westernmost cities, furthest from the fighting in the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts and the Crimean peninsula, on the eastern side of the country. As is apparently standard in Ukraine at the moment, there are soldiers everywhere. Most are apparently on leave and none are armed even the police, unusual for the region. However, theyre still omnipresent, even hitting some of the same tourist attractions as we do in this small but pleasant city. Members of the Berkut militia, famed for their brutal intervention during the 2013 Euromaidan uprising, stand around the station, unarmed, in ludicrous blue-and-white camo gear.

Members of the Berkut militia, famed for their brutal intervention during the 2013 Euromaidan uprising, stand around the station, unarmed, in ludicrous blue-and-white camo gear.

In the main market square, a shack has been set up with blasting music, piles of spent mortar shells and hundreds of photographs and profiles, memorialising the dead of the Euromaidan and the war. It sits on its own. Most people ignore it.

Nationalism and war propaganda have taken hold in a curious way in Lviv through tourism. The standard tat-ridden hole-in-the-wall shops and stalls sell anti-Putin and pro-Ukrainian merchandise (patriotic t-shirts, even) alongside woven rugs and wooden swords. I bought a doormat with Putins face on it, and I am informed it calls the Russian dictator something extremely unpleasant. Im aware I might have just funded the Ukrainian nationalist far right, but since I did so to the tune of around 2 (the Ukrainian Hryvnia isnt a particularly durable currency, and Ukraine is cheap), I can probably live with myself.

In one corner of the rather pretty central square is the Pravda Beer Theatre, which sells nationalist merchandise, including a Putin-branded beer that depicts the man naked (and poorly endowed) against a backdrop of Russian soldiers invading Ukraine. Its not great beer, but the message Putin Huilo (or Putin is a dickhead (rough translation)) is everywhere. They also sell Trump Beer, a fine Imperial Mexican lager that goes down very smooth and made the customs officers laugh when we brought it through the airport.

He greets visitors with a machine gun, and offers a late-night shooting range (against Putin-shaped targets, of course).

Elsewhere, theres a hidden WWII partisan-themed bar beneath the square, with a doorman who requires the password:Slava Ukrayini!. He greetsvisitors with a machine gun, and offers a late-night shooting range (against Putin-shaped targets, of course). The place isnot quite as depressingly nationalist as the rumoured bar elsewhere in the city, run by the right-wing ultranationalist group Right Sector (Source: Russian. Treat with caution), but it speaks to a general trend.

Incidentally, if youre visiting Lviv, I can say that both those bars pale in comparison to the Masoch bondage cafe (link SFW-ish). Both a celebration of Leopold Von Sacher-Masochs ideas and the ultimate extension of Ukrainian wait-staff rudeness (both national institutions), it serves excellent cocktails and reasonably decent beatings.

The war is still a long way from Kiev, but it still has the trappings of a city at war. Soldiers are omnipresent, as, of course, are flags. The propaganda is muted, oddly confined to advertising billboards which would otherwise promote local restaurants and space exhibits at nearby museums. Nevertheless, it is there mostly recruitment posters, occasionally featuring heroic soldiers standing alongside warriors from Ukraines past.

Below the Peoples Friendship Arch, a soviet-era monument symbolising the friendship between Ukraine and the other Soviet nations (mainly Russia, of course), the inscriptions have been spray-painted out with the colours of the Ukrainian flag, and daubed with anti-Russian slogans. Shortly after we left, the arch began being painted in the colours of the rainbow for the upcoming Eurovision.

the situation is much more fluid towards the frontlines, where many are less inclined to take sides or even actively resentful at being forced to choose

Theres an interesting display at the WWII memorial museum at the south end of town. We went there to climb the 62m statue of Mother Motherland (which only takes cash, if youre wondering. Bring 200 UKH each, there are no cash machines), but found a new exhibit beneath it. The museum displays a number of tanks and armoured personnel carriers captured on the frontlines, along with what purports to be evidence that they belong to, or have been loaned from, the Russian Federation. Russias extensive involvement in the War in Donbass is hardly secret, but its startling to see physical proof, even if the technical details require verification.

( placard placed next to the vehicle shown in the header image )

The nationalism and anti-Russian sentiment on display in Kiev is more muted than in Lviv, but its still interesting to note that both are much more strongly pro-Ukrainian than many further East. Contacts note that the situation is much more fluid towards the frontlines, where many are less inclined to take sides or even actively resentful at being forced to choose between Russian and Ukraine. One noted that the separatists may well have won the 2014 Donbass referendums even without the extensive rigging and intimidation of the opposition that took place Eastern Ukraine feels much closer to Russia than Europe, and did not necessarily view the 2013 revolution favourably. Partly for this reason, the War in Donbass seems to have frozen, just as the wars in Transnistra, Abkhazia and others have done before them.

All image credit: Rob Harding

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TRAVEL DIARY: UKRAINE, PART I - Norwich Radical (blog)