Oh the isolation of Russia is terrible… (~SARC~)

Fact:

Coffee-iconNot long ago China and Russia started a visa free program. If five people or more want to travel to China as a group from Russia, then they do not need a visa; and I am not sure if that is vice a versa? This program with China is the basics for a visa free Russia and India, except India only cares if it is three people, then no visa. Thus, a basic family of mom, dad and child can go to India with no visa issues…  (Here)

Then the call for visa free BRICS has come forth and that looks like it will happen, soon…

Then I became sad, for I am watching the reversal of the world power structure and I happen to be sitting on the wrong side of the future passport freedom affair…

Instead of Russia being isolated, as even our president of the U.S. says; “Well, today, it is America that stands strong and united with our allies, while Russia is isolated, with its economy in tatters.” – Obama quote…

If you could be in my shoes, then you would see how pathetic of a statement that Obama made and he even made it with a straight face. So that tells me something and tells me I was correct all those years ago, about what I thought about Obama. Russia is thriving and less isolated than at any time in modern history…

But!

Everyday America becomes more isolated and Russia becomes more centre stage in world affairs. The process of peaceful negotiations has finally overridden the hate and warmongering from the west. The lies and deceit by the west is coming home to roost…

The call for boycotting the west is become a growing entity amongst the calls for world freedom from western pressure. America has lost its grip and they never saw it coming, for self-assuredness is a deficit not a advantage…

Things are changing…

But, But…

You know you have become second fiddle when your U.S. CIA sponsored ISIS is endangered of being killed off and you have to either go along with it or admit that they are your peeps…

And that would be worse than the slap in the face you just got as your bluff is called. Bullies have a limited life span and thank god for that…

It is what I think and have a coffee…

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to

The devil is in the details…

I have studied for weeks and weeks. Literally the whole summer. I had to remove the back lean-to and literally it was leaned against the  home and putting terrible pressure on the back wall. The lean-to was collapsing from rot, but only the bottom half. The top half was still solid and attached to the wall with spikes. As the lean-to sank, the pressure on the wall increased and before much longer the wall would support the whole lean-to or what is left of it. The wall could not take that and with no one around, by next spring the whole rear wall of the home would be on the ground with most likely the whole home…

I had to remove the lean-to but remove the pressure from the home first and with some beams and a single hacksaw blade, I pulled the lean-to away from the wall. I had to cut twelve spikes as big as your finger around and used a crowbar to separate the lean-to from the wall enough to cut all the spikes. This was after I braced the lean-to up as self-supporting. To pry the spikes out, meant to tear the wall down and that I did not care to do. I am living here, you know…

Even yet, with all the planning, the lean-to was so weak, that I ended up supporting the damn thing myself, as the middle roof beam was so rotten it exploded as I finished the last cut spike…

I got out from under the old roof by bracing a thin stick within reach and the stick broke just as I jumped out. Then the lean-to fell against the house. I then started to panic and grabbed my hatchet that I had bought for this purpose and proceeded to cut the roof in half like a psycho bear and shoved the pieces to the ground. This was the panic part of the whole issue. I am going to have to sharpen that hatchet, for I cut several nails in half and there went that blade. Though it cut like a knife through butter for the most part, well that is, until the end of my excursion…

At some places on that roof, there was twelve layers of black tar paper, some with asphalt shingle grit and it was heavy. The rest of the roof area, is an old chicken coop and that will be much easier to remove. For some reason they supported the wall there and it is a whole bunch more solid at that point. In the next few weeks, I will remove the wood I tore down and the chicken coop. I then will soak the wall with termite killer and the ground, then I need to figure out the best mud to fill the missing mud packing (chinking) between the logs. Then as I am mudding, I need to try to repair any serious damage and I need to install two beams on the outside to match the inside already there and run four huge bolts through the wall, to bolt them tight together.I got that idea from Sveta’s father in-law. He is the one who saved this home the first time and I refuse to allow his work to crumble…

Then next year, I will rebuild the chicken coop and a lean-to, but along the back fence line, away from the village home…

imagesNow since I have had six heart attacks and I am wore out, I am going to read a book, that same book I talked about in an earlier post. Time to rest, until tomorrow…

But I had fun! 😉

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Coffee and musing…

IMG0981AI find life interesting and I find that I do dumb things at times. Yesterday, I was staining a walking stick and using a rusty nail and vinegar solution. It was strong and I mean strong, then after doing the staining, I realized that I had turned the tannins in the tea stain and most likely in my skin, black. I then looked at the bottle of vinegar and realized that I was using 80% vinegar. That means 80% acetic acid in the vinegar and that means some strong stuff… 🙂

The walking stick came out perfect and is the best I have ever done, but, I fried my hands and it is going to take time to wear out the colouration that has embedded itself into the skin on my hands. I am talking some serious deep colouring, like a tattoo… (LOL, it is really cool!)

I have scrubbed and scrubbed and scrubbed, but no way it will come out and it took scrubbing five times just to stop the acetic acid from converting the soap to lye. Or at least that is what it looked like and I can tell that it sucked the moisture out of my hands. Then I scrubbed three more times and soaked in plain water for 10 minutes to counter act the effect. At least stop the reaction…

Then I went back to work on my walking stick…

* * * * * * * * * *

olympus-sz-14Well the above is something that worked for the stick, but kinda messed up my skin on my hands. Now something that works for me…

Olympus sz-14! This is the camera that Sveta bought for me. It is small, 24X zoom and takes fantastic images. It is not the big camera (it is not apples to apples,) but it is a camera that I can stick in my pocket and take images when needed. It does take fantastic close ups and below is an example…

woodvine

Or normal image…

wood vine

And the colour is not bad…

fall time

It is what works for me…

* * * * * * * * * *

Well the above camera is wonderful and Sveta really picked out the best there is for what I do in the village. She is a smart girl and she just seems to know what is perfect or not…

The rain is falling and the lake is half empty…

lake empty

Thus, it is a yucky day. The image above is an image of where they will pull the fish from. The harvest happens right there and if you look closely, you will see concrete pads laying out of the water now. That is where they do all there work from and normally it is all hidden under water. This all means that any day now, the cranes, fish trucks and a bunch of guys will come to harvest the lake. The fish are being squeezed into a smaller and smaller area. It is time…

* * * * * * * * * *

texet-my-phoneAnother wonderful item, an item that just does the job is my phone. I talked about my cellphone last year and if you follow the blog, you understand that I kill cellphones as fast as I get them. Therefore, when I have a phone that has survived the onslaughts of life in my hands, then that phone is one tough device…

The phone is to the right and it just does what it should do! Survive dropping, drowning and big grouchy bears… 🙂

It really does look as good as when I bought it and it has outlasted a dozen phones in the past. It simply is that good…

http://windowstorussia.com/one-thing-i-am-good-at-is-destroying-cellphones.html

It has been a year and the phone is fantastic. The only complaint is the camera and I have yet to figure out why even put a camera on a phone, if the camera just plain sucks at taking images?

Got me…

* * * * * * * * * *

The rain has interrupted the day, thus I will read! I am hooked on these Jack Reacher books and now understand the controversy over the movie. I watched the movie a few days ago with Tom Cruise as Jack Reacher. If you never read the books and that is a huge portion of America, then the movie is Okay! But if you have read one Jack Reacher book and watch the movie, then the movie is a hill of beans and it it rotten…

Tom Cruise as a 6 foot 5 inch, 250 pounds of killing machine, is not at all appropriate. Tom Cruise is about the size of (the character known as Jack Reacher) one of his legs and camera angles just made me laugh at the attempt to cover up a shrimp playing a lobster…

Tom Cruise is 5 foot 7 inches people…

I realize Cruise is a money maker, but it only works in this case, because no one reads any more and the ones that do read, are few and far between. If we had readers, then they would never cast a tiny guy in the place of a big guy character…

That tells me something about our society…

* * * * * * * * * *

Time to go and see everyone tomorrow…

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Where I live; Russian Village…

Okay, a number of people have asked politely, for me to give an idea about where I am at. Thus I will show you in some images…

Red is our Monastery Village…
Grey is Lumber Village…
Yellow is Fish Village…
Green is Church Village…
Black is Big Village…

Today I am going to the Big Village and the Fish Village. I will pass through the Church Village and I will wish that I could get lumber from the Lumber Village, because I need to rebuild some things around the village home…

Now you have an idea about my little part of the world. I am in the middle of nowhere and am happier than a bug in a rug…

Have a nice day…

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Watergate and the Washington Post’s Big Lie:

The Silent Coup and 40 Years of Neocon, Neoliberal War by John Stanton

The [Washington] Post lied to its readers by printing stories it knew were false, and they allowed Woodward to lie with impunity. That included printing stories that claimed that Moorer or others had never talked to us for Silent Coup, when in fact the Post’s reporters not only knew they had been interviewed, but they had done so on tape. Their editors and allies waged a campaign of disinformation and intimidation against other media organizations that considered printing parts of Silent Coup or airing stories about the book.” (Len Colodny, Silent Coup)

If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.” (Joseph Goebbels, Minister of Propaganda, Nazi Germany)

A typical United States history text used by American public and private high school (grades 9-12) has this to say about President Richard Nixon’s resignation: “Main Idea: President Richard Nixon’s involvement in the Watergate scandal forced him to resign from office. The Watergate scandal raised questions of public trust that still affect how the public and media skeptically view politicians.” The Americans (McDougal and Littell, 2005).

There is reference to the usual cast of characters involved with the Committee to Reelect the President and the members of the US Congress who conducted the Watergate hearings. The Wikipedia entry on Nixon and his downfall pushes the same sanitized narrative.

There are deep craters in these presentations of Nixon. They have been filled with cheery accounts of the effectiveness of the systems of checks and balances in which the US Congress rose to the challenge of the imperial presidency and set the country back on track to a free and open democracy.

Nixon remains the face of political evil for many Americans. And young high school and college Americans are taught that Nixon’s paranoia, insecurity, racism and disdain for all but his closest staff members were the preeminent causes for his resignation on August 9, 1974. The narratives have been sanctioned by America’s political, military, academic and business elite because they are simplistic and an easy “sell” to, as Jim Morrison of the Doors once sang, a “fragile eggshell mind”, which is to say, the American public.

Nixon’s presidency is defined by his shortcomings and Watergate. But it really is a messy crime scene with many unsolved and unresolved matters. In this sense it remains a sort of Cold Case, desperately in need of revision to include the role of the US military Joint Chiefs of Staff and its spy operation within the National Security Council, an expose of the man who orchestrated the Watergate break-in, and the devious actions of General Alexander Haig, USA (ret.) in the National Security Council, and the dicey reporting of Bob Woodward and the Washington Post.

Fortunately Len Colodny has exposed the gaps in the story. Silent Coup: The Removal of a President (1992, re-release 2015) and The Forty Years War: The Rise and Fall of the Neocons, from Nixon to Obama (2010) severely damage the narrative. It is easy to dismiss his works as conspiracy theory if one is a disciple of the Mr. Clean theory of Watergate: All inconvenient facts are bleached from the crime scene.

But both works are impeccably written in a smooth fashion and are supported by an oil tanker’s worth of interviews and references. Colodny’s collected works on Nixon and Watergate are housed at Texas A&M University. They contain “approximately 800 hours of taped interviews, with more than 100 people who were affiliated with the Nixon Administration, and those that followed. Historians, who go to Texas A&M and the online portal the University is developing, will find Colodny’s extensive interviews with Nixon’s closest aides and associates, including H.R. Haldeman, his Chief of Staff; Attorney General John Mitchell; and Domestic Policy Chief John Ehrlichman. It also includes exclusive interviews with “Washington Post” reporter Bob Woodward and White House Counsel John Dean, whose testimony during the 1973 Watergate Hearings helped detail Nixon’s involvement in the Watergate cover-up.

Listed below (quoting directly) are some of Colodny’s key findings. They can be located at Watergate.Com: Correcting the Historical Record.

John Dean

Along with showing the ties between Woodward and Haig, we also showed how Dean ordered the Watergate break-in mostly to cover his involvement with a prostitution ring run by a madam, Heidi Rikan, who was a close friend of Dean’s girlfriend and wife, Maureen Biner Dean. At the time, the Deans hid behind the smoke screen that Rikan’s alias, Kathie Dieter, was not Rikan. We knew that Rikan and Dieter were the same person, and we proved it. Together, the revelations provided a dramatically different version of the events that drove Nixon from office. Dean, Haig and Woodward reacted as expected; he attacked us but never landed any substantive criticisms of the book’s findings.

Woodward and Haig

Bob Woodward lied to conceal his early ties to General Alexander Haig. In 1969 and 1970, Navy Lt. Bob Woodward manned the Pentagon’s secret communications room, which transmitted messages around the world, including the back channel communications for Henry Kissinger and President Richard Nixon. In that duty, Woodward often delivered messages from the world’s top leaders to Gen. Alexander Haig, Kissinger’s deputy at the National Security Council…This relationship is critical to the Watergate scandal as Haig was the key source for Woodward on his most important story, that there were “deliberate erasures” on a critical Nixon White House tape.

Deep Throat

Woodward, by using “Throat”, is concealing the person that actually erased the tape or at the very least witnessed it being erased. Colodny tells Woodward in the interview transcript below: “the word that jumps out at you is deliberate. Because if somebody is deliberately erasing tapes that are before Judge Sirica, we’re talking about a crime.”

It is significant because, if for “Throat” to know it was deliberate, he either erased the tape or witnessed its destruction. It is clear that both the process of elimination and Woodward’s changing story about “Throat” as a source, that Alexander Haig is the source that told him that there were deliberate erasures on the White House tapes.

US Military Spy Operation on Nixon-Kissinger

During the next seven days, White House and Pentagon investigation teams sprang into action, and soon found the immediate culprit, Charles E. Radford. Radford was a career US Navy Yeoman who worked in the National Security Council offices and frequently copied classified documents and even admitted to rifling through Kissinger’s briefcase. His confession and that of his superior, Admiral Robert O. Welander, began to unravel the trail of espionage that stretched back thirteen months to November 1970. According to this historical perspective, it began when the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Thomas H. Moorer became suspicious of the foreign policy decisions of Nixon and National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger. These policies included how Nixon was running the war in Vietnam, his pursuit of détente with the Soviets and his plans to open up trade with China. In short, the military feared that Nixon was selling out the United States to our greatest enemies: the Communists. For this reason, a spy ring was organized inside the White House’s National Security Council office for the purpose of stealing the President’s most important secrets and to undermine his policies. This led to the dramatic events of December 21, 1971 — the seventh day.

On that day, Nixon learned of the spy operations in all its minute details, and made a fateful decision, one that would deeply affect the course of his administration and be a factor in its demise in 1974. When told of the spy operation, Nixon initially declared it a “federal offense of the highest order.” But he did not demand that anyone be prosecuted. Rather, he covered up what he learned that day, and would later re-appoint Moorer as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs.

The spy ring and his lack of reaction and retaliation would remain the deepest and most closely guarded secret of his Administration. The President even managed to conceal the presence of the spy ring during the Watergate scandal, when revealing it might well have saved his presidency. In later years he refused to acknowledge the truth about it even when confronted with the strongest available evidence — taking the secret to his grave.

Colodny’s Forty Years War: Why is the USA in Such a Mess?

In 2012 I had this to say about Colodny’s epic work, The Forty Year’s War: He has written an exceptionally documented and scintillating yarn of American politics dating from the World War II years to the first days of President Obama’s administration. The marquee events, names and organizations common in today’s political/historical analyses of those years and neocon movement and its successes and failures are all featured prominently in the book: Kissinger, Nixon, Haig, Reagan, Clinton, Bush (first and second), Obama, Rumsfeld, Cheney, Carter, Bin Laden, Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Watergate, Iran-Contra, 911, Bob Woodward, the Cold War, the Project for a New American Century, the American Conservative Union and so on.

But the real power of the book comes from Colodny’s digging beneath the standard American historical narrative of the panoply of events, issues and personalities of 1945-2009 to adroitly reveal the many stories of personal power grabs; political infighting between the White House/CIA, State and Defense Departments and Congress; ideological constitutional warfare; and, arguably, petty criminal activity bordering on treason. All of this is sourced with 432 “notes” to the text and a fine bibliography.

In a recent update to Silent Coup, Colodny had this to say of the findings in The Forty Years War published in 2009:

“At the time, the war in Iraq was a deadly stalemate that produced daily comparisons with Vietnam. We began investigating how the United States could become stuck in another land war without end – this time in the Middle East. Alexander Haig, the general who became Nixon’s chief of staff in 1973, was the focus of some of our original research. We asked how did Haig end up working at the National Security Council for Henry Kissinger? We learned Haig had been recommended by two colleagues at the Pentagon -former Army counsel Joseph Califano and Haig’s mentor Fritz G.A. Kraemer, a German-born political analyst who had also discovered Kissinger as a young Army private during World War IL Our research showed the extent of Kraemer’s influence in the military and federal government. Kraemer’s hardline views shaped those of Haig, who often bridled at the policies pushed by Kissinger and Nixon. It was Haig who supplied information to the Pentagon that Nixon and Kissinger wanted to hide from the military.

Kraemer’s influence continued past Nixon into the Ford administration, where he worked with President Ford’s chief of staff Donald Rumsfeld and his successor, Dick Cheney. Those two would become the Defense secretary and vice president who helped guide President George W. Bush into the disastrous invasion of Iraq. The Republican ‘Peace through Strength’ mantra from Ronald Reagan until this very day is based totally on Kraemer’s ‘Provocative Weakness Theory’ The Forty Years War was published in December 2009. The book reinforced the discoveries of Silent Coup and incorporated the advances made by those influenced by Silent Coup. The findings of The Forty Years War have not been challenged…”

The American ruling class is telling Big Lies about its direct support of Nazi sympathizers instrumental in the Ukraine Coup; its attempt to dismantle Russia through sanctions, currency manipulation, and tampering with the world’s oil production; its wayward children of ISIS; its military encirclement of China; and its drive to cull the population of the USA through austerity programs and the creation of class and foreign wars. It is all so easy to see.

Over at Fabius Maximus the results of a recent YouGov poll on a military takeover of the USA were discussed: “Then comes the worse news. The YouGov poll shows that 29% of Americans can imagine a situation in which they would support the military seizing control of the federal government… It’s an old story…the unwillingness of Rome’s people to bear the burdens of self-government. Strong men contended for the throne, as seems increasingly likely to happen to America, when we turn to the police or military for succor during bad times. The people of Rome reacted to the fall of the Republic and rise of the Empire with resignation, such as Stoicism, Epicureanism, Hedonism, and Christianity. What philosophies or religions will we create to numb our sense of responsibility? The Founders modeled the United States after Rome, and worried that we would follow the same course. Their writings, such as the Federalist Papers, describe our love of liberty as the foundation of the Republic. The next generation or two might prove that we deserve their confidence. Or not.”

John Stanton writes on national security and political matters. Reach him at captainkong22@gmail.com

Soon our village lake will be harvested…

car-crapThey have been harvesting all the lakes. We are at the end of the system of lakes, thus last to be harvested. Yesterday they started to drain the lake. You can hear the roar of the water as it is sucked out the exit tube. They do it slow and steady, so the fish do not get taken out with the flow, but it still is sounding like a jet engine in the distance…

Therefore, soon you will have images of them harvesting the carp crop. I have a tripod and will set the big camera up and I plan on taking a video of them as they go through the process with the harvest…

The carps are huge and this is one of the biggest temporary lakes they have. They have three lakes that never get emptied. I noticed that the lakes that never get emptied are lakes that have natural water sources. The lakes that are used just during the summer are lakes they pump water from the river to fill…

I could have taken images at any time of this process, for they are harvesting the other lakes now. The water is being drained in dozens of small lakes and the fish are being sold. The roads are destroyed by the huge trucks with tanks that come to get the fish. I want to record our harvest, not the other lakes though…

I studied the carb business in Russia this summer and from what I am seeing and reading, the carp business has never been better. It is considered better than money (any money) for trade. Carp can be dried, salted, sugared, stewed, baked, fried and a hundred other things and ways. Carp is food and home-grown food…

That is why I am learning to utilize the carp as the Russian Villagers do and save it for the winter time as dried and cured fish. I still am stigmatized by my past and the dislike for carp as a food fish. I remember the hate toward carp and actually other fish as an edible food. I also remember as a little child and I caught a carp…

The words ring in my ears forever, as this huge white guy sitting nearby bellowed “Throw that damn #$@^ away, you little #$@^! Only Negroes eat carp!”  as he spit on the ground in disgust…

Now the interesting part is; I got spanked for catching that carp! And it was pointed out to me that only those people on the opposite side of the lake ate carp! Yes our lake had a black side and a white side. I guess someone forgot to tell that to the carp I caught. I was told to never catch a fish like that again. My dad spanked me, thus, I hated (harsh word) abhorred carp, until I came to Russia… 🙁

Yes, I did a lot of things like that as I grew up! What a bad boy I was!

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

You Really Should Try Russia…

Сахалинское лето, остров Сахалин

Video presentation of amazing places in Russia, done for the Festival called, “Russian Miracle!”

Yup!

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

It is Autumn in Russian Village…

Maple TreeTerrible image; Taken with cell phone and still dark. So washed out, but it caught my attention as I walked Boza this morning and the rain was about to start. I snapped it and it shows Fall is here…

I am looking at the baby maples growing in the field next to it and looking to find a maple for our yard. It is a Sugar Maple and Russians seem oblivious to the Sugar Maple and her delights. They instead love their White Birch tree and use the sap from that. I need to find a field and grow a crop of Sugar Maples and get rich one day with syrup…

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Just a Russian Village Day

Boza is the boss and as such he gets to watch me work. He cracks the whip and sleeps as I get the job done. Then he wants to be feed and scratched behind the ears. Sounds good to me and when I get all grown up, I want to be a straw boss… 😉

Oh my the fish is so good. Above in the image it is bagged up, I eat a little at a time, for it is salty and I want to watch the salt intake, sometimes…

There has been field trip after field trip with kids from the schools all around the area. Father Pavel (main monk) talked with me yesterday and he showed me a whole bunch of pictures of the monastery. We were interrupted by the bus coming and he hopped on with the kids and up the hill they went. The kids all waved at Boza and I and Father Pavel said that we could continue later (like in future,) with the discussion. I would like to get the pictures he has. I saw images of the original monks and monarchy. The original monks are female and he showed me images of the one who ran the place when it first opened. Maybe just maybe, so cross your fingers…

I have started the forth pile of wood at the back fence line. The third is done and ready for winter. The fourth at the back fence line will be the newest wood and wood that needs to season a year at least. I am hoping to get a truck load of wood free or pay minimal price for it. The locals all get the wood and I hope Sveta can help in that area. I have Vova working on it, but Vova is in love and love overrides many things… 🙂

Don’t worry, I have enough wood for this winter, I am just a greedy gobbler and want more. The more I have the better for emergencies…

Have a nice day…

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Walking Last Night in the Russian Village…

Boza and I take lots of walks, but this one I took the camera. I just grabbed four of the 74 images I took and put them here. I only worked only half the time yesterday and walked only four times. Boza was grouchy because I did not walk him as much. I was grouchy because I only got half of what I feel like I should get done, done!

Strange how Boza has a big yard and he can do what he wants in the yard. I do not chain him up and even at times I leave the gate open. He never leaves the yard, unless I tell him to. He is a good dog and he gets so excited when I say the word, “Walk!”

Short article today. I am going to lay back down and rest. The weather is changing and it will warm up for a week or so. That is what I am feeling, the change in the weather and it is really getting me down right now…

Going to go finish reading the number four book of the Jack Reacher series. 100 pages to go and I will know, “Whodunit!”

Have a nice day…

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…