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Free Pussy
#11
Yekaterina Samutsevich, defendant in the criminal case against the feminist punk group Pussy Riot, closing statement:

"In the closing statement, the defendant is expected to repent, express regret for their deeds or enumerate attenuating circumstances. In my case, as in the case of my colleagues in the group, this is completely unnecessary. Instead, I want to voice my thoughts about the reasons behind what has happened to us.

That Christ the Savior Cathedral had become a significant symbol in the political strategy of the authorities was clear to many thinking people when Vladimir Putin's former [KGB] colleague Kirill Gundyayev took over as leader of the Russian Orthodox Church. After this happened, Christ the Savior Cathedral began to be openly used as a flashy backdrop for the politics of the security forces, which are the main source of power [in Russia].

Why did Putin feel the need to exploit the Orthodox religion and its aesthetic? After all, he could have employed his own, far more secular tools of powerfor example, the state-controlled corporations, or his menacing police system, or his obedient judiciary system. It may be that the harsh, failed policies of Putin's government, the incident with the submarine Kursk, bombings of civilians in broad daylight, and other unpleasant moments in his political career forced him to ponder the fact that it was high time to resign; that otherwise, the citizens of Russia would help him do this. Apparently, it was then that he felt the need for more persuasive, transcendental guarantees of his long tenure at the pinnacle of power. It was then that it became necessary to make use of the aesthetic of the Orthodox religion, which is historically associated with the heyday of Imperial Russia, where power came not from earthly manifestations such as democratic elections and civil society, but from God Himself.

How did he succeed in doing this? After all, we still have a secular state, and any intersection of the religious and political spheres should be dealt with severely by our vigilant and critically minded society, shouldn't it? Here, apparently, the authorities took advantage of a certain deficit of the Orthodox aesthetic in Soviet times, when the Orthodox religion had an aura of lost history, of something that had been crushed and damaged by the Soviet totalitarian regime, and was thus an opposition culture. The authorities decided to appropriate this historical effect of loss and present a new political project to restore Russia's lost spiritual values, a project that has little to do with a genuine concern for the preservation of Russian Orthodoxy's history and culture.

It was also fairly logical that the Russian Orthodox Church, given its long mystical ties to power, emerged as the project's principal exponent in the media. It was decided that, unlike in the Soviet era, when the church opposed, above all, the brutality of the authorities towards history itself, the Russian Orthodox Church should now confront all pernicious manifestations of contemporary mass culture with its concept of diversity and tolerance.

Implementing this thoroughly interesting political project has required considerable quantities of professional lighting and video equipment, air time on national TV channels for hours-long live broadcasts, and numerous background shoots for morally and ethically edifying news stories, where the Patriarch's well-constructed speeches would in fact be presented, thus helping the faithful make the correct political choice during the difficult time for Putin preceding the election. Moreover, the filming must be continuous; the necessary images must be burned into the memory and constantly updated; they must create the impression of something natural, constant and compulsory.

Our sudden musical appearance in the Cathedral of Christ the Savior with the song "Mother of God, Drive Putin Out" violated the integrity of the media image that the authorities had spent such a long time generating and maintaining, and revealed its falsity. In our performance we dared, without the Patriarch's blessing, to unite the visual imagery of Orthodox culture and that of protest culture, thus suggesting to smart people that Orthodox culture belongs not only to the Russian Orthodox Church, the Patriarch and Putin, that it could also ally itself with civic rebellion and the spirit of protest in Russia.

Perhaps the unpleasant, far-reaching effect from our media intrusion into the cathedral was a surprise to the authorities themselves. At first, they tried to present our performance as a prank pulled by heartless, militant atheists. This was a serious blunder on their part, because by then we were already known as an anti-Putin feminist punk band that carried out their media assaults on the country's major political symbols.

In the end, considering all the irreversible political and symbolic losses caused by our innocent creativity, the authorities decided to protect the public from us and our nonconformist thinking. Thus ended our complicated punk adventure in the Cathedral of Christ the Savior.

I now have mixed feelings about this trial. On the one hand, we expect a guilty verdict. Compared to the judicial machine, we are nobodies, and we have lost. On the other hand, we have won. The whole world now sees that the criminal case against us has been fabricated. The system cannot conceal the repressive nature of this trial. Once again, the world sees Russia differently from the way Putin tries to present it at his daily international meetings. Clearly, none of the steps Putin promised to take toward instituting the rule of law have been taken. And his statement that this court will be objective and hand down a fair verdict is yet another deception of the entire country and the international community. That is all. Thank you."
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
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#12

The Pussy Riot Story Now Has a Body Count




ALEXANDER ABAD-SANTOS10:46 AM ET
In one of the more disturbing things you'll hear out of Russia regarding Pussy Riot, the bodies of two murdered women were found in the town of Kazan, with the words "Free Pussy Riot" scrawled out on the wall above them. Clearly, a double-murder is scary no matter what, but it's those words, "Free Pussy Riot," that are complicating things since no one really knows who's behind this horrific act. Did a Pussy Riot supporter really kill these women? Is the Russian government killing people to smear supporters of Pussy Riot?
Well, as The Guardian's Miriam Elder reports, people are saying both. "Opposition activists immediately said the alleged graffiti were an attempt to smear the band and their supporters," she writes, adding that activists said that initial investigators made no mention of the words and that Pussy Riot has always encouraged a nonviolent protest. "One Russian investigator cautioned that the killer was possibly trying to mislead police by drawing attention to supporters of the punk provocateurs," she adds. As CNN reports, the murder investigation (the bodies were found on Wednesday) is just two weeks removed from the members of Pussy Riot being jailed for "hooliganism." As The Associated Press' Mansur Mirovalev notes, Orthodox and Kremlin supporters are parlaying the murders into a political and religious soapbox. "The infernal force that drives them hates God, believers and humankind in general," Dmitry Tsorionov, a leader of an Orthodox youth group was quoted as saying in The AP report. "These people are capable of committing any crime, and nothing but force and law can stop them." So... just to be clear there's either a murderer on the streets of Kazan trying to make a point about Pussy Riot or a government that isn't afraid in trying to make a point about Pussy Riot that involves murder. Neither one of those is exactly comforting.
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/global/20...unt/56369/

"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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#13
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/de...pics-sochi

Quote:The "amnesty" for Pussy Riot and the Greenpeace Arctic 30 is a classic PR masterstroke. Ordered by Vladimir Putin nothing of this nature happens without him it soothes international opinion, while keeping those who pose a real threat to his regime firmly behind bars.
The most relevant literature regarding what happened since September 11, 2001 is George Orwell's "1984".
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#14
Interestingly Khodorkovsky is also granted amnesty. I wonder what recent or coming uses Putin has for Khodorkovsky? The Torygraph is saying it is because of the Sochi games but I think it more likely to do with the Ukraine.

Quote:

Vladimir Putin pardons oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky in Amnesty

Jailed oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky to be pardoned, according to announcement following Vladimir Putin's marathon press conference



By Roland Oliphant, Moscow

12:44PM GMT 19 Dec 2013




[Image: icons_bullet_2537659a.jpg] Vladimir Putin's annual press conference as it happened


Putin has said he will pardon Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former oligarch who has languished in jail on tax evasion and embezzlement charges since challenging Mr Putin's authority a decade ago, in a bomb-shell decision that appears linked to the up-coming Sochi Winter Olympic games.

Mr Khodorkovsky, who is widely viewed as Mr Putin's arch enemy, joins a number of high-profile prisoners including Pussy Riot's Nadezhda Tolokonnikova and Maria Alyokhina who will be released in an amnesty ahead of the February Games.

"He has served more than 10 years, that is a serious term, I think that a decision must be made [on a pardon]," Mr Putin said in apparently off the cuff comments after journalists surrounded him at the end of a four hour press conference.

Mr Khodorkovsky had never before submitted an appeal for clemency, but had "written such a document very recently," Mr Putin said.

"It will be enacted shortly," he added.
[SUB] Russian tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky Photo: AFP/Getty Images [/SUB]

The bomb-shell announcement provoked confusion in Mr Khodorkovsky's own camp, with defence lawyers initially denying either they nor their client had made any such appeal.
"He did not appeal [for a pardon] and we know of no one who appealed on his behalf," said Khodorkovsky's lawyer Vladim Klyugvant. "We don't know have any such information, although people have appealed for a pardon over the past several years." But they later put out a statement retracting all comments until Mr Khodorkovsky had spoken with his lawyers.
A source close to Mr Khodorkovsky's legal team told the Telegraph that the former oligarch appealed for a pardon because his mother has cancer. The source, who asked not to be named, added that if the petition is successful it should be granted in the next few days.
Mr Khodorkovsky, currently an inmate of prison colony No. 7, a remote camp north of the Arctic Circle in Karelia, was one of the original "oligarchs" to mass fabulous wealth and power in the rough-and-tumble privatizations of state property that followed the fall of the Soviet Union in the 1990s
[SUB]Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers his annual press conference to Russia [/SUB]

Starting out as a small entrepreneur running a cafe, he quickly he rose to control his own bank, Menatep, through which he eventually acquired control of Yukos, Russia's largest oil company.
But when Vladimir Putin arrived in the Kremlin determined to curb the power of the oligarchs, the two men found themselves on a collision course over management of the oil and gas sector and governance of the country with Mr Khodorkovsky increasingly looking like a potential rival for the presidency.
By late 2003, the relationship between the two men was at breaking point, and on 25 October that year a convoy of special forces surrounded Mr Khodorkovsky's private jet on the tarmac at Novosibirsk airport and arrested him at gun point.
He was subsequently sentenced to nine years for tax evasion after a controversial trial in 2005. In 2010 Mr Khodorkovsky received a second 12 year sentence on charges of embezzling a vast amount of oil, though after a judge reduced the sentence he was due to finish that term in August next year.
Time does not seem to have cooled relations with the two men, with Mr Khodorkovsky regularly issuing statements from prison attacking Mr Putin for rolling back democracy. Mr Putin, in turn, has angrily batted aside questions about Mr Khodorkovsky in previous press conferences.
The announcement of a pardon came a day after the Russian parliament approved a wide-ranging amnesty of those accused of non-violent crimes that would release some of the country's highest profile prisoners.
Mr Putin confirmed on at his press conference that the amnesty would include Ms Alyokhina and Ms Tolokonnikova of Pussy Riot, despite what he called their "disgraceful" punk performance in the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in 2012.
"I feel sorry for them not only because they are in prison, but because they degraded themselves," he said.
Ms Tolokonnikova's husband, Pyotr Verzilov, has already flown to the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk in anticipation of his wife's release from a prison hospital there. He has said he expects her release in the coming days.
And he added that the 30 Greenpeace activists arrested by Russian forces after a protest at a Russian oil rig in January would also be going home though he added that he hoped their ordeal in jail had "taught them a lesson." All three cases have drawn sharp criticism from both Western governments and NGOs including Amnesty International, and the move appears to be a consolidated effort to win over international opinion ahead of the Winter Olympics this February - a pet prestige project that Mr Putin has personally nurtured to fruition and which he is anxious to see pass off smoothly.
Several Western leaders, including Barack Obama, have announced that they will not attend the on February 7 opening ceremony of the Olympics, in what seems to be calculated snub amid growing concern about the country's human rights record.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnew...nesty.html
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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#15
It is an interesting move.... Khodorkovsky never deserved to be in prison, in the first place, and was on trumped up charges on Putin's command. Polls have shown that Khodorkovsky would win in a fair election even after his imprisonment...but if he's smart he'll 'get out of Dodge' and watch out for Polonium cocktails wherever he lives. If he stays in Russia, I can't imagine what to expect...stay tuned. ::fortuneteller::
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
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#16
I think he definitely deserved to be in prison but not on those charges. One of the greatest theives and vandals of the soviet society. But an interesting move on Putin's part and looking to see where this may lead.
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Reply
#17
I remember all sorts of intell games and ploys by the BND and CIA being played about the ownership of Yukos Oil Company by Mikhail Khordorkovsky, as I knew someone who was investigating this at the time and who had some good insider info.

The always curious death of banker Edmund Safra - money launderer and crook par excellence, factors into this, plus the even stranger death, three years earlier, of a member of the Rothschild banking family in a Paris hotel, which I have often felt might also be related.

I'm posting below an essay writer by oil market expert William Engdahl and published by VoltaireNet.Org which is insightful.

Quote:

The Real Crime of M. Khodorkovsky

by F. William Engdahl
The final decision in the Russian trial against former oil oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky has drawn dramatic statements of protest from the US Obama Administration and governments around the world labeling Russian justice as tyrannical and worse. What is carefully omitted from the Khodovkorsky story however is the true reason Putin arrested and imprisoned the former head of Russia's largest private oil giant, Yukos.


VOLTAIRE NETWORK | FRANKFURT (GERMANY) | 5 JANUARY 2011 [Image: ligne-rouge.gif]
[Image: zoom-32.png]
[Image: _0-_-5578e-87189.gif]The Obama administration, in an unusual public rebuke, condemned a Moscow court for finding oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky and his former partner guilty of embezzling, saying it appears to be "an abusive use of the legal system for improper ends."Mikhail Khodorkovsky's real crime was not stealing Russia's assets for a pittance in the bandit era of Yeltsin. His real crime is that he was a key part of a Western intelligence operation to dismantle and destroy what remains of Russia as a functioning state. When the facts are known the justice served on him is mild by comparison to US or UK standard treatment of those convicted of treason against the state. Obama's torture prison at Guantánamo is merely one example of Washington's double standard.According to the politically correct sanitized account in Wikipedia, "Yukos Oil Company was a petroleum company in Russia which, until 2003, was controlled by Russian oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky…Khodorkovsky was convicted and sent to prison…Yukos was one of the biggest and one of the most successful Russian companies in 2000-2003. In 2003, following a tax reassessment, the Russian government presented Yukos with a series of tax claims that amounted to $27 billion. As Yukos's assets were frozen by the government at the same time, the company was not able to pay these tax demands. On August 1, 2006, a Russian court declared Yukos bankrupt. Most of Yukos's assets were sold at low prices to oil companies owned by the Russian government. The Parliamentary Council of Europe has condemned Russia's campaign against Yukos and its owners as manufactured for political reasons and a violation of human rights."[Image: khodor-eltsin250-8e007-8a24b.gif]Prior to his arrest in 2003 Khodorkovsky (in the photo with first Russian President Boris Yeltsin) funded several Russian parties, including the Communist Party, most of which were in competition with each other.If we dig a little deeper however we find a quite different case. As he stepped out of his private plane in Siberia in October 2003 Khodorkovsky was arrested. He was arrested, as Wikipedia correctly states, for tax crimes. What they did not say is that he at the tender age of 40 had risen to become the richest man in Russia worth some $15 billion by fraudulent acquisition of state assets during the lawless Yeltsin era. In an auction run by his own bank, Khodorkovsky paid $309 million for Yukos. In 2003 the same company was assessed as worth $45 billion, and not owing to Khodorkovsky's management genius.In 1998, Khodorkovsky had been let free in a US case where he was charged with helping launder $10 billion with his own bank and the Bank of New York. He had very influential friends in the US it appeared. The then head of the Republic National Bank of New York, Edmund Safra, was murdered some months later in his Monaco apartment reportedly from members of an alleged "Russian mafia" whom he had cheated in a drug money laundering scheme.But there was more. Khodorkovsky built some impressive ties in the West. With his new billions in effect stolen from the Russian people, he made some powerful friends. He set up a foundation modeled on US billionaireGeorge Soros' Open Society, calling it the Open Russia Foundation. He invited two powerful Westerners to its boardHenry Kissinger and Jacob Lord Rothschild. Then he set about to develop ties with some of the most powerful circles in Washington where he was named to the Advisory Board of the secretive private equity firm, Carlyle Group where he attended board meetings with fellow advisors such as George H.W. Bush and James Baker III.However, the real crime that landed Khodorkovsky behind Russian bars was the fact that he was in the middle of making a US-backed coup d'etat to capture the Russian presidency in planned 2004 Russian Duma elections. Khodorkovsky was in the process of using his enormous wealth to buy enough seats in the coming Duma elections that he could change Russian laws regarding ownership of oil in the ground and of pipelines transporting same. In addition he planned to directly challenge Putin and become Russian President. As part of the horse trade that won Putin the tacit support of the wealthy so-called Russian Oligarchs, Putin had extracted agreement that they be allowed to hold on to their wealth provided they repatriate a share back into Russia and provided they not interfere in domestic Russian politics with their wealth. Most oligarchs agreed, as did Khodorkovsky at the time. They remain established Russian businessmen. Khodorkovsky did not.Moreover, at the time of his arrest Khodorkovsky was in the process of negotiating via his Carlyle friend George H.W. Bush, father of the then-President George W. Bush, the sale of 40% of Yukos to either Condi Rice's former company, Chevron or ExxonMobil in a move that would have dealt a crippling blow to the one asset left Russia and Putin to use for the rebuilding of the wrecked Russian economy: oil and export via state-owned pipelines to the West for dollars. During the ensuing Russian state prosecution of Yukos, it came to light that Khodorkovsky had also secretly made a contract with London's Lord Rothschild not merely to support Russian culture via the Open Russia Foundation of Khodorkovsky. In the event of his possible arrest (Khodorkovsky evidently knew he was playing a high-risk game trying to create a coup against Putin) the 40% share of his Yukos stocks would pass into the hands of Lord Rothschild.The crocodile tears of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama for the violations of Khodorkovsky's human rights hide a far deeper agenda that is not being admitted. Washington used the Russian to try to reach its goal of totally destroying the only power left on the earth with sufficient military strike power to challenge the Pentagon's Full Spectrum Dominance strategycontrol of the entire planet. When seen in that light the sweet loaded words "human rights" take on a quite different meaning.


The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
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