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Monday, May 29, 2023

Update from Ukraine | Zelensky announced the counterattack | The Main or...

FINALLY: Major development in Trump prosecution in Georgia

EXCLUSIVE: White House delivers MAJOR UPDATE on BRILLIANT DEAL

China is taking Over Vladivostok

 

The Chinese taking over Vladivostok says Putin needs money and other things for his special operations.

It's going to quickly turn into a Chinese community that will dominate the city. As the Ukrainian thing continues more deals will be made and the usage of Vladivostok could be a 109 year lease to china.

putins selling his nation and has no idea what he is doing anymore.

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A Forgotten Hero Of The Rape Of Nanjing

 

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John Rabe


John Rabe was a German businessman and a member of the Nazi party. He lived in Nanjing, China, where he worked for Siemens. In 1937 Japanese army attacked the city and slaughtered 50,000 - 400,000 civilians in what became later known as the Nanjing Massacre. Rabe was one of few foreigners that stayed in the city. He used his Nazi party membership and negotiated with the Japanese army creation of the Nanjing Safety Zone where the army would not attack, thus saving lives of around 200,000 people. During the massacre he actively participated in protecting civilians, putting his life at risk.

When he returned to Germany, he started talking about the massacre and wrote a letter to Hitler. He was then detained and interrogated by Gestapo, but later released and he was not allowed to talk about the massacre any further.

After the war, due to his Nazi party membership he was unable to find a job and lived in poverty, suffering malnutrition. When the citizens of Nanjing heard about his situation, they raised $2,000 (a lot of money at that time) and the mayor of Nanjing himself flew to Germany to deliver him the money and food. They continued sending him a food package every month and he died in 1950.

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Mark Brown
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Russian Remilitarization

 

The World Affairs Councils of America

Your complimentary one-year subscription to DailyChatter is provided by the World Affairs Council of Northern California with the mission of educating and engaging Americans on global issues.

Good Morning, today is May 29, 2023.

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NEED TO KNOW

Russian Reveille

RUSSIA

Twenty-three years ago, respected Russian-American journalist Masha Gessen penned an op-ed in the New York Times describing the remilitarization of Russian life. She described rules and regulations to funnel boys into the service, the boosting of military spending by 50 percent, and military detachments “adopting” teen orphan boys and the sons of single-mother households.

In recent years, especially as his regime faces questions over the military’s relatively poor performance in Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin has explicitly injected patriotism and militarism into his country’s schools, the Economist reported. These efforts bolster the war effort in Ukraine today, prepare the next generation for war tomorrow, and foster a climate where questioning the war is forbidden.

“Schools have been ordered to conduct ‘patriotic’ classes parroting the Kremlin line on the war, and teachers who refuse have been fired,” wrote the Washington Post. “Textbooks are being purged of almost all references to Ukraine and its capital, Kyiv.”

Putin also recently reinstated military training and exercises in schools, Newsweek added. The city of St. Petersburg was compelled to buy “assault rifles and dummy grenades” for basic military training courses. A Moscow Times photo essay showed young students putting on gas masks, aiming pistols and rifles, climbing ropes, and caring for a colleague’s ankle.

Inculcating martial principles into generations of Russian youth has changed the country’s culture, argued Global Voices, describing the appearance of a “new archetype” of Russian citizen: “Homo militaris”. Told all their lives that Russia faces relentless enemies from the West and elsewhere, these Russians accept Putin’s propaganda and root for their heroes in their nation’s so-called “special military operation” in Ukraine.

But this segment of Russian society can’t convince skeptics that Putin’s plans are going swimmingly. The Russian army has been underperforming, and the Ukrainians have yet to even launch their expected spring counteroffensive. According to Reuters, Putin’s ally Yevgeny Prigozhin, the founder of the private mercenary Wagner Group, recently warned of revolution if Russian elites didn’t start taking the war seriously. He recently pulled out the militia fighters from Bakhmut and no one is quite sure why.

Meanwhile, Homo militaris certainly doesn’t appear to be volunteering to join the fight. As Al Jazeera reported, the Russian army needs more soldiers and conscripts – but draft dodging is a major problem despite the harsh punishments meted out to those who refuse to serve. Russian recruiters have consistently failed to hit their targets since the war began in February 2022, noted Worldcrunch.

More peace seems easier in comparison.


Some Reflections On U.S. Memorial Day 2023

     Today is Memorial Day or Veteran's Day here in the US. It is a holiday to honor the 646,596 military personnel killed in various wars and the 539,000 military personnel who died in war zones due to "non-combat causes." The total is 1,185,596 men and women lost from 1776 to 2023. This is a staggering total. Let us put this into perspective. In World War II, Russia waged the Great Patriotic War against the Nazis. Some 27 million Russian men, women, and children died in that horrible war. Some 10.2 million Chinese were killed resisting the Japanese in World War II.

   A number of our readers have served in the armed forces of various countries. There is a small group of us who have been in a war zone and have actually been "under fire." Haim and Sarah Feigenbaum, Claud Knoesen, Sue Digre's sons, and I are a part of that small group.

     If you go to the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, D.C., you will find the names of four of my high school classmates on the wall. They were killed in Vietnam. Had a North Vietnamese gunner did not make a mistake in setting the fuse on an artillery shell for airburst instead of impact, I would have my name on that granite wall. I would have been dead for 52 years. Those of you who have known me a long time, know that I am a very lucky man.

    I am going to leave you with a thought to ponder. Elena has a friend for decades named Patricia. She has two sons. When one son reached 12 years of age, we gave him an invitation that many young people would be enthusiastic to accept. We offered to fly him from Argentina to the US. We offered him free room and board. We offered to get him a free high school education. If he did well, we offered to finance his college education.

        Much to her surprise, he rejected the offer. He made a profound comment that sticks with me after all these years as follows:

      "I do not want to live in the U.S. It is a country constantly involved in a war."

Sunday, May 28, 2023

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