tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10671271.post2308792604855683813..comments2023-12-27T20:05:32.809-07:00Comments on Intergalactic Source of Truth: Chechnya insights and new perspectives.Col. B. Bunnyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09590364016079745156noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10671271.post-16379933203607217462018-05-25T18:47:08.933-06:002018-05-25T18:47:08.933-06:00. . . whomever. . . whomeverCol. B. Bunnyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09590364016079745156noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10671271.post-7191279155539564942018-05-25T18:44:41.345-06:002018-05-25T18:44:41.345-06:00Thanks for checking in, Mr. Scott.
Chechnya's...Thanks for checking in, Mr. Scott.<br /><br />Chechnya's a pretty amazing place, not least for the glaring absence of metrosexuals. It's a male society and then some. It still manifests some of the Islamic nuttiness as events in the last few days show and I have no idea how to come up with some kind of comprehensive opinion on the place. It is decidedly "different" and the quotes don't signify sarcasm. I find I am less exercised about Muslims when they are in their home countries. When they reach the West they seem to turn into something very nasty indeed. Solution? Everybody stop trying to change/convert/dominate the majority population and go back home. Once everybody's back where they live, then it's time for whoever to show what they can do. Esp. true for blacks here. They're here to stay but it's past time for them to perform and they need to do it in separate communities of their own (preferably a state of their own).<br /><br />I think you're right about a deal between Putin and Kadyrov. There does seem to be an extra special, strong bond with Putin that suggests a loyalty based on real feeling. Putin seems to have done something more than just make a political deal with Kadyrov.<br /><br />The U.S. definitely does seem sclerotic and, worse, lost these days. I detect no strategic vision underlying our present policies, other than a certain common sense (finally!) on trade, business, tax, and regulatory matters. People like Tulsi Gabbard stand out as serious people but they are rare. Most of the rest are just time servers.<br /><br />Putin, in contrast, seems to think carefully about what he should do and show a remarkable willingness to talk directly to Russians on the factory floor or elsewhere. I gather he recently held forth for a two-hour call-in program where citizens can speak to him directly. Works for me! Over here I feel like an irritant to my "representatives." They're nice enough but communication with them feels like an exercise in just going through the motions.Col. B. Bunnyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09590364016079745156noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10671271.post-13747030496805319342018-05-22T08:33:38.366-06:002018-05-22T08:33:38.366-06:00Thanks Colonel, an interesting read. I read around...Thanks Colonel, an interesting read. I read around the subject and I have a distinct impression that the deal with the Kadyrovs is an apparent agreement to allow them semi-autonomy in return for being subject and Loyal to the Fatherland. I will read more about the Wahhabist scum referred to and the rest of your work here. Thanks again. It is hard to see the President of USA having anything near the authority of Putin [ MRGA] making Russia great again. In fact I find reading about USA kind of sad and sludgy now, like a decaying mid-afternoon soap opera on tv.paul scotthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15675247055484136242noreply@blogger.com