Below I recommended two articles about the occupation of Bucha, one from the Journal, the second from Der Spiegel. They are really best read together because they tell different but complementary stories. The first is more about an indisciplined and corrupt army which resorted to escalating brutality and killings as they became both more convinced the population was the Ukrainian Army against them and also more angry about their military failure. The second article gives more focus to mass killings as matters of policy, particularly military aged men and various local notables on lists of politicians, local leaders, former or possible future soldiers, anyone defined as a ‘nationalist’. The power of reading them together is that you get a sense of how both things were happening, both were feeding on each other.
Partisan Wisconsin Election Investigator Harasses Assembly Speaker For More Time
Fresh off of a visit with Donald Trump, the partisan investigator leading Wisconsin Republicans’ look at the 2020 election demanded more time and support from the legislature.
Continue reading “Partisan Wisconsin Election Investigator Harasses Assembly Speaker For More Time”Another Must Read Piece
Here is a great companion piece to the Journal article on Bucha that I linked to earlier. It’s from Der Spiegel. But it’s in English. It’s a very different sort of article but largely lines up in the story it tells. There’s quite a lot here, a lot of it hard to read. But I wanted to draw your attention to one passage which drives home just how critical the very early battlefield successes of the Ukrainian Army were to galvanizing the resistance of the Ukrainian population (emphasis added) …
Continue reading “Another Must Read Piece”A Deeper Mystery
I hope you’ve had a chance to read Josh Kovensky’s exclusive about the DC feds impersonators. Normally we wouldn’t be terribly interested in whether someone’s rents were months or years in arrears. But in this case it makes this story even more baffling and mysterious. We’ve been wondering for a couple days, Who was behind this? Where’d the money come from? As Josh reports, it wasn’t coming from anywhere. Because these guys never paid rent at all. The landlord eventually sued them but when it came time to evict they were protected by COVID-era eviction moratoriums.
Continue reading “A Deeper Mystery”Don Jr. Sent Mark Meadows Election Theft Plans Two Days After 2020 Election Day: CNN
Donald Trump Jr. texted then-White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows two days after Election Day, laying out plans to steal the 2020 election, CNN reported Friday.
Continue reading “Don Jr. Sent Mark Meadows Election Theft Plans Two Days After 2020 Election Day: CNN”Two Acquittals, Two Mistrials In Federal Trial Over Whitmer Kidnapping Plot
The weeks-long trial of four men accused of conspiring to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D) ended Friday with no guilty verdicts.
Continue reading “Two Acquittals, Two Mistrials In Federal Trial Over Whitmer Kidnapping Plot”EXCLUSIVE: New Details Deepen Mystery Of The DC Fed Imposters
It’s still not certain what the D.C. duo accused of impersonating federal agents was up to, but it’s clear they were anything but discreet.
Continue reading “EXCLUSIVE: New Details Deepen Mystery Of The DC Fed Imposters”A Must Read
I want to strongly commend this article in The Wall Street Journal on Bucha to your attention. It’s very hard to read and also a near masterpiece of narrative reporting. We’ve all seen the pictures and the horrors of this town. And there’s been claims of organized mass killing and even a plan of organized genocide. This account provides a more complicated but no less horrifying account. As we’ve heard from other towns, Russian soldiers were initially reasonably behaved and even polite to Ukrainian civilians in the town. Some confided with locals that they weren’t sure why they were there or what the point of the war was. But over time discipline began to break down. And Russian soldiers became increasingly suspicious that Ukrainian civilians were communicating their positions to Ukrainian soldiers and irregulars. This became a bigger concern as the Russian offensive bogged down. “They saw a spotter in every person who lived on the fifth floor,” one Bucha resident told the Journal, “They saw a commando in each of us.”
Continue reading “A Must Read”White House Takes Victory Lap With To-Be Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson
President Joe Biden is hosting an event with Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson Friday afternoon on the South Lawn of the White House to celebrate her successful Senate confirmation to the Supreme Court.
Jackson is technically a “justice-in-waiting” until she’s sworn in to replace Justice Stephen Breyer, expected to happen when the Court takes its summer recess in June or July. Still, Biden said he intends to officially introduce “the next Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.”
Weirder and Weirder
We’re following various leads on the DC Secret Service/impersonation caper. Some of them are quite, quite weird. But the most interesting thing about this case so far is how little information we know. The raids in this story happened two days ago, Wednesday afternoon. Normally in a case like this — apparent espionage, probable corruption involving the Secret Service — we’d be seeing a steady stream of articles revealing new details of the plot. But there’s close to nothing. I get the sense that’s because the DOJ and the FBI don’t really know themselves. Or at least, they didn’t yesterday.
Continue reading “Weirder and Weirder”