Immigration is wild rn
Crazy how hard it is to get into some countries even with all your shit together
Crazy how hard it is to get into some countries even with all your shit together
yesssssss....
e: for those who may not know, Tornadocash is one of the main ways people launder money with crypto
e: for those who may not know, Tornadocash is one of the main ways people launder money with crypto
By Laboured Go To PostJesus
Rita Landman, an endocrinologist who was in the audience, walked on stage to offer assistance after the talk. She said that Mr. Rushdie had multiple stab wounds, including one to the right side of his neck, and that there was a pool of blood under his body. But she said he appeared to be alive and was not receiving CPR.jesus
“People were saying, ‘He has a pulse, he has a pulse he has a pulse,’” Ms. Landman said.
By inky Go To PostHe has had a a fatwah against him forever but I doubt that's it.$3 million bounty
By jjasper Go To PostYes but they weren’t emails and there aren’t laptops involved so it isn’t that bad."You see I don't understand how email works therefore bad"
"I get these spam sandwich things that tell me I ordered from Geek Squad and I never did! I bet that's what Killary did."
By reilo Go To Post
In case you were wondering if the NYT Opinion column was still At It™
How can he get away with storing TOP SECRET and other CLASSIFIED material outside of an OPSEC zone? Government takes this stuff very seriously.
By Frustrated_me Go To PostHow can he get away with storing TOP SECRET and other CLASSIFIED material outside of an OPSEC zone? Government takes this stuff very seriously.well he didnt necessarily get away considering the fbi came get them back
but you know the answer
By Frustrated_me Go To PostHow can he get away with storing TOP SECRET and other CLASSIFIED material outside of an OPSEC zone? Government takes this stuff very seriously.the go-to will be the cic being the highest classifying authority technically so its not hard to imagine
the return, manipulation, storage of all this stuff tho wew
Of course trump leaked the non-redacted version to right wing sites so his goonies can attack the agents.
By FortuneFaded Go To PostWhat are the odds of Trump pulling a Polanski?His ego won't ever let him believe anything would happen, plus he clearly has people willing to die for him so he probably expects them to keep him safe should anything ever actually go down.
When this is all said and done Trump may get a very serious censure harrumph harummph have you no decency sir
Not this:
also full-on leaking is easier to prosecute I'd imagine
Not this:
also full-on leaking is easier to prosecute I'd imagine
By Frustrated_me Go To PostHow can he get away with storing TOP SECRET and other CLASSIFIED material outside of an OPSEC zone? Government takes this stuff very seriously.
Nothing will happen to him.
By jjasper Go To PostOf course trump leaked the non-redacted version to right wing sites so his goonies can attack the agents.Deplorable.
The Russian economy contracted steeply in the second quarter as the country felt the brunt of the economic consequences of its war in Ukraine, in what experts believe to be the start of a yearslong downturn..
The economy shrank 4 percent from April through June compared with a year earlier, the Russian statistics agency said on Friday. It is the first quarterly gross domestic product report to fully capture the change in the economy since the invasion of Ukraine in February. It was a sharp reversal from the first quarter, when the economy grew 3.5 percent.
By You got 14 bricks right there? Go To PostNothing will happen to him.Pretty much.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/07/22/russia-economy-sanctions-myths-ruble-business/
Five months into the Russian invasion of Ukraine, there remains a startling lack of understanding by many Western policymakers and commentators of the economic dimensions of President Vladimir Putin’s invasion and what it has meant for Russia’s economic positioning both domestically and globally.
Far from being ineffective or disappointing, as many have argued, international sanctions and voluntary business retreats have exerted a devastating effect over Russia’s economy. The deteriorating economy has served as a powerful if underappreciated complement to the deteriorating political landscape facing Putin.
That these misunderstandings persist is not entirely surprising given the lack of available economic data. In fact, many of the excessively sanguine Russian economic analyses, forecasts, and projections that have proliferated in recent months share a crucial methodological flaw: These analyses draw most, if not all, of their underlying evidence from periodic economic releases by the Russian government itself. Numbers released by the Kremlin have long been held to be largely if not always credible, but there are certain problems.
First, the Kremlin’s economic releases are becoming increasingly cherry-picked—partial and incomplete, selectively tossing out unfavorable metrics. The Russian government has progressively withheld an increasing number of key statistics that, prior to the war, were updated on a monthly basis, including all foreign trade data. Among these are statistics relating to exports and imports, particularly with Europe; oil and gas monthly output data; commodity export quantities; capital inflows and outflows; financial statements of major companies, which used to be released on a mandatory basis by companies themselves; central bank monetary base data; foreign direct investment data; lending and loan origination data; and other data related to the availability of credit. Even Rosaviatsiya, the federal air transport agency, abruptly ceased publishing data on airline and airport passenger volumes.
Five months into the Russian invasion of Ukraine, there remains a startling lack of understanding by many Western policymakers and commentators of the economic dimensions of President Vladimir Putin’s invasion and what it has meant for Russia’s economic positioning both domestically and globally.
Far from being ineffective or disappointing, as many have argued, international sanctions and voluntary business retreats have exerted a devastating effect over Russia’s economy. The deteriorating economy has served as a powerful if underappreciated complement to the deteriorating political landscape facing Putin.
That these misunderstandings persist is not entirely surprising given the lack of available economic data. In fact, many of the excessively sanguine Russian economic analyses, forecasts, and projections that have proliferated in recent months share a crucial methodological flaw: These analyses draw most, if not all, of their underlying evidence from periodic economic releases by the Russian government itself. Numbers released by the Kremlin have long been held to be largely if not always credible, but there are certain problems.
First, the Kremlin’s economic releases are becoming increasingly cherry-picked—partial and incomplete, selectively tossing out unfavorable metrics. The Russian government has progressively withheld an increasing number of key statistics that, prior to the war, were updated on a monthly basis, including all foreign trade data. Among these are statistics relating to exports and imports, particularly with Europe; oil and gas monthly output data; commodity export quantities; capital inflows and outflows; financial statements of major companies, which used to be released on a mandatory basis by companies themselves; central bank monetary base data; foreign direct investment data; lending and loan origination data; and other data related to the availability of credit. Even Rosaviatsiya, the federal air transport agency, abruptly ceased publishing data on airline and airport passenger volumes.
By You got 14 bricks right there? Go To PostNothing will happen to him.This is my stance until something actually happens.
scotus has to make a new precedent saying a president can declassify documents in his head without telling anyone
love it
love it
By Perfect Blue Go To PostLol why would Biden pardon him?For “healing the country”
By Perfect Blue Go To PostLol why would Biden pardon him?The nation must heal or something
Well the difference is Ford was Nixon’s VP and… naw you mfers are right Biden would totally bungle that shit.
By Perfect Blue Go To PostLol why would Biden pardon him?
When they go low, we go ineffectual
By Not Go To PostI feel like that somehow would only make them hate Biden moreOkay. And? lol