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Posts Tagged ‘Russia’

Obama = Hitler, So Say….the Russians?

by tqcincinnatus ( 287 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Politics, Russia at October 22nd, 2009 - 7:25 pm

Hey, they said it, not me,

Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin and Benito Mussolini were very popular at the time, but they were not presented with the Nobel Prize. Yet, they were nominated for same.

If we look down the history from 1900 to 2009, we will find only one person who was extremely popular and talked about like President Obama. That person is Adolf Hitler, leader of the Nazi Party and chancellor of Germany.

Despite both men’s popularity; there are more scary similarities between these two leaders:

Both Obama and Hitler share similar ancestries: Obama German, Hitler Austrian.

Both leaders had been surrounded by many controversies concerning birth certificate, citizenship and religion.

Both had the father figure issues. Obama’s parents separated when he was two years old and they divorced in 1964. His father returned to Kenya and saw him only once more before dying in an automobile accident in 1982. Hitler had a troubled relationship with his tradition-minded authoritarian father, who frequently beat him.

During their teenage years both leaders had problems with alcohol. Obama called the alcohol phase “greatest moral failure”, Hitler called it “most humiliated experience in life”.

Both are unloved by the Jewish, for Hitler is well known why, for Obama, well, his victory in Presidential elections was not received with welcome in Israel.

Time magazine named Obama person of the year in 2008, Hitler in 1938.

Yeah, the rest of the world just loves President Hopenchange, don’t they?

I’m not exactly sure where they’re getting the bit about Obama being German, or the part about Hitler being influenced by Martin Luther (at the link), but the list of similarities between Obama and Hitler is pretty telling.  Not because of any mystical magic-through-time George Noury synchronicity type thing, but just because the traits that make up an authoritarian personality of leftist persuasion seem to be pretty applicable across the board. 

Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela To Go Nuclear

by WrathofG-d ( 186 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Iran, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Nuclear Weapons, Russia, United Nations, Venezuela, World at September 16th, 2009 - 10:07 am

Undoubtedly a result of the fecklessness of the Obama Administration, and the UN in response to Iran’s moving forward toward nuclear weapons, Hugo Chavez has decided to begin working on becoming a nuclear power himself.

The connections between Venezuela and Iran are well documented, and it seems that we are now finally seeing the fruits of our ignoring them.

It is all being underwritten by Russia (of course).

http://mypetjawa.mu.nu/archives/chavez_ahmadinejad_iran_hug.jpg http://static.indianexpress.com/m-images/2009-04-18/M_Id_72338_obama_chavez_meet.jpg















CARACAS, Venezuela —  Hugo Chavez wants to join the nuclear energy club and is looking to Russia for help in getting started.

The Venezuelan leader is already dismissing critics’ concerns over his nuclear ambitions, offering assurances his aims are peaceful and that Venezuela will simply be following in the footsteps of other South American nations using nuclear energy.

Yet his project remains in its planning stages and still faces a host of practical hurdles, likely requiring billions of dollars, as well as technology and expertise that Venezuela lacks.

Russia has offered to help bridge that gap, and Chavez has announced that the two countries have created an atomic energy commission.

“I say it before the world: Venezuela is going to start the process of developing nuclear energy, but we’re not going to make an atomic bomb, so don’t be bothering us afterward … (with) something like what they have against Iran,” Chavez said Sunday.

The socialist president is closely allied with Iran and defends its nuclear program while the U.S. and other countries accuse Tehran of having a secret nuclear weapons program.

Does this “we are doing it just for peaceful purposes” sound familiar?

Oh, don’t worry; the Obama Administration responded:

U.S. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly on Monday expressed misgivings about Venezuela’s nuclear ambitions. Responding to a reporter’s question about whether the United States would be worried about nuclear transfers between Iran and Venezuela, Kelly said: “The short answer is, to that, yes, we do have concerns.”

Kelly noted that Venezuela is a signatory of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which would restrict any nuclear program to nonmilitary purposes.

{The Article}

Friday Linkage

by Kafir ( 12 Comments › )
Filed under Links, Open thread at May 1st, 2009 - 7:01 am

Pakistani Artist, Poet Murdered in Shariah “Honor” Killing

Ali Saleh Kahlah Marri admits helping 9/11 architects

Five things to watch in Russia-Georgia relations

French Stimulus: 5 More EC725 Helicopters

UAE is world’s third-biggest arms importer: think-tank

Replacement Speculation Begins

Jimmy Cayne on Tim Geithner: ‘This Guy Thinks He’s Got a Big Dick. He’s Got Nothing, Except Maybe a Boyfriend’

OH! And Dimwit of the month (April 2009) (thanks village Idiot)

The Cyber Threat to America

by Phantom Ace ( 10 Comments › )
Filed under China, Russia at April 27th, 2009 - 2:00 pm

This is an under reported story. China and Russia are conducting Cyber spying on America. This is a serious risk that needs to be discussed.

THE CYBERSPY THREAT

AMERICA needs to pay a heckuva a lot more atten tion to the cyberthreat. Now.

Sure, the Pentagon is refuting a Wall Street Journal report last week that hackers pinched loads of data on the military’s newest, high-tech fighter aircraft from contractors’ computer networks via the Internet.

But even if the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program wasn’t actually penetrated by cyberspies, it’s still a chilling wake-up call for the United States.

However, the Pentagon seems to be finally getting serious.

Government rumblings, such as Defense Secretary Robert Gates‘ creation of a Pentagon cybercommand, may hold some promise in protecting military networks, but the cyberthreat clearly exceeds that.

At least Def. Sec. Robert Gates knows this is a threat. I salute his alertness and wish the Pentagon luck.  Securing our information systems structure is vital to our security.