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MSgt Steve Sweeney
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"They [Trumpublicans] are hoping that their present support for Ukraine and democracy makes us forget their past support for Putin, even as former president Trump continues to call him “smart.” And yet, Republicans changed their party’s 2016 platform to favor Russia over Ukraine; accepted Trump’s abrupt withdrawal of U.S. troops from northern Syria in October 2019, giving Russia a strategic foothold in the Middle East; and looked the other way when Trump withheld $391 million to help Ukraine resist Russian invasion until newly elected Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky agreed to help rig the 2020 U.S. presidential election. (Trump did release the money after the story of the “perfect phone call” came out, but the U.S. Government Accountability Office, which investigated the withholding of funds, concluded that holding back the money at all was illegal.)"
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Maj John Bell
Maj John Bell
2 y
The Biden administration has been in power with a majority in both houses for more than a year. No matter how hard you try to keep the focus on President Trump, President Biden and the Democrat majorities own the crap sandwich(es) we are in now. Or do you have a different date in mind for when they become responsible?

I don't need you to forget the Trump administration come this November. I need you to open your eyes to the crap sandwich(es) the Biden administration and the Democrats are trying to feed us. Big government, no matter who is calling the shots, is not now, nor will it ever be my "go to."
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MSgt Steve Sweeney
MSgt Steve Sweeney
2 y
Maj John Bell - ""They [Trumpublicans] are hoping that their present support for Ukraine and democracy makes us forget their past support for Putin, even as former president Trump continues to call him “smart.” And yet, Republicans changed their party’s 2016 platform to favor Russia over Ukraine; accepted Trump’s abrupt withdrawal of U.S. troops from northern Syria in October 2019, giving Russia a strategic foothold in the Middle East; and looked the other way when Trump withheld $391 million to help Ukraine resist Russian invasion until newly elected Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky agreed to help rig the 2020 U.S. presidential election."
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Maj John Bell
Maj John Bell
2 y
MSgt Steve Sweeney - Yes, you already said that before. Doesn't change my opinion that the Biden administration is not up to the task and the Democrats vision for America is a nanny-state disaster.
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MSgt Steve Sweeney
MSgt Steve Sweeney
2 y
Maj John Bell - Your opinion and a $1.25 will get you a coke at just about any 7-11. Might even get you more if you take it to Moscow.
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SGT Unit Supply Specialist
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"Southern novelist William Faulkner’s famous line saying “The past is never dead. It’s not even past,” is usually interpreted as a reflection on how the evils of our history continue to shape the present. But Faulkner also argued, equally accurately, that the past is “not even past” because what happens in the present changes the way we remember the past.

Russia’s attack on Ukraine and the defiant and heroic response of the people of Ukraine to that new invasion are changing the way we remember the past.

Less than a week ago, Russian president Vladimir Putin launched an assault on Ukraine, and with his large military force, rebuilt after the military’s poor showing in its 2008 invasion of Georgia, it seemed to most observers that such an attack would be quick and deadly. He seemed unstoppable. For all that his position at home has been weakening for a while now as a slow economy and the political opposition of people like Alexei Navalny have turned people against him, his global influence seemed to be growing. That he believed an attack on Ukraine would be quick and successful was clear today when a number of Russian state media outlets published an essay, obviously written before the invasion, announcing Russia’s victory in Ukraine, saying ominously that “Putin solved the Ukrainian question forever…. Ukraine has returned to Russia.”

But Ukrainians changed the story line. While the war is still underway and deadly, and while Russia continues to escalate its attacks, no matter what happens the world will never go back to where it was a week ago. Suddenly, autocracy, rather than democracy, appears to be on the ropes.

In that new story, countries are organizing against Putin’s aggression and the authoritarianism behind it. Leaders of the world’s major economies, including Japan, South Korea, Australia, and Singapore, though not China, are working together to deny Putin’s access to the world’s financial markets."...
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