The Friday Five – What’s Next for Ukraine?
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken made an offer this week to Vladimir Putin, essentially trading the Donbass and Russia’s land bridge to Crimea for peace. Trouble is the Russians don’t believe him.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken made an offer this week to Vladimir Putin, essentially trading the Donbass and Russia’s land bridge to Crimea for peace. Trouble is the Russians don’t believe him.
A Pfizer executive was caught on video admitting that he and other Pfizer execs have discussed “mutating” SARS-2 virus to create tailored vaccines.
Some of the vaccinated are angry that the jab has not been as safe or effective as promised, but the apology they want is from the unvaccinated, who allegedly didn’t try hard enough to warn them of the danger.
In a December interview, Germany’s former Chancellor Angela Merkel admitted that the Minsk agreement was not a peace deal, but a ruse to buy time for Ukraine to arm itself for the current proxy war between NATO and Russia.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s visit to Beijing last week may be the opening move in an effort to replace the US with China as a key ally and trade partner.Continue Reading
German media reports that the size of the devices used to sabotage the Nord Stream gas pipelines means a state actor must be responsible. European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen promises the “strongest possible response.”Continue Reading
Russia is being blamed by most Western analysts for sabotaging the Nord Stream gas pipelines, but Poland’s former foreign minister has thanked the United States for doing the deed.Continue Reading
The two natural gas pipelines connecting Germany to Russia were sabotaged Monday. The perpetrator hasn’t been determined, but it had to be a group or state with sophisticated special forces-like capabilities.Continue Reading
A German bakery was shocked when its bill for natural gas, normally about $5,800 a month, jumped to about $87,500 a month for the last quarter. The ongoing proxy war between NATO and Russia is leading to a cold, dark, and hungry winter for Europe.Continue Reading
When a new Illinois law takes effect Jan. 1, suspects charged with felonies, including second-degree murder, aggravated battery, and arson, will be released without bail. One state’s attorney calls it the “end of days.”Continue Reading
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