Something Wrong With This Picture: 4 USA Aircraft Carriers = Persian Gulf…

The US Navy has unexpectedly dispatched a fourth aircraft carrier to the Persian Gulf, along with a fleet of underwater drones in what is being considered just the latest move in a series of escalations leading towards a potential war with Iran…

That reminds me of the job numbers every Friday “unexpectedly” went the wrong way and the USA economy looks worse than expected…

What the hell are we (USA) doing with 4 aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf?

Are we that stupid? Or, are we looking for a war?

Yup! Remember it is election time…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Syrian opposition claims government forces stormed a village in the province of Hama on Thursday, killing at least 200 people…

The bottom line was: The reports could not be independently confirmed…

But Numerous reports all over the world cite rebel activists who themselves quoted local witnesses, that the Syrian government tank shelled 200 innocent people and then shot them in the head…

The one thing I do know as fact, because I am watching it happen, Each single time the UNSC holds a meeting there is a massacre taking place in Syria only a few hours time frame with that meeting…

The reports could not be independently confirmed…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia

PS: Funny how a government that is under constant scrutiny as Syria is, would do another so called Hama incident and even worse this time. Next time it will a thousand killed and all shot in the head…

But the reports could not be independently confirmed as the Western Empire marches on…

When Did Mainstream News Become Fiction?

I was thinking in the middle of the night, “When did mainstream news become nothing but fiction and why did we allow it to happen?”

Might as well just pick up a science fiction book and read it! You at least have some entertainment and joy!

Mainstream News is nothing but fictional lies to feed your mind nothing but dribble all day…

I just am not going to take it anymore…

Try reading “The Zombie Source Code!” It has more truth than the news any day…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia

NGO’s and the Super Whine…

Non-Government Organizations or as we like to say NGO are having a huge hussy fit in Russia and they demand that they do not have to reveal and give transparency to themselves. For if they do have to! Then the game is over and they will all be called on the carpet…

It seems that Putin is reserving some amendments for the law that he himself feels are necessary. But I have to say, that the Non-Government Organizations in Russia are really really having a fit. I guess that this is a long time in coming law that has been needed. Russia has allowed these NGO to run a muck and cause lots of issues. This is how America has been funneling money into Russia illegally and getting away with it. Believe you me America has laws much worse than this pertaining to Non-Government Organizations in America. Transparency is first and foremost in America with a NGO…

I am very suspicious or anyone having a problem with transparency about how foreign money is being used inside of Russia or any nation for that matter. The NGO in Russia have proven that they can not be trusted and so Russia is forced to make rules and laws that they have to follow. I realize that not all NGO are an issue and many are very good to have, but when just one tries to circumvent the system and cause political issues in a country then they all have to be scrutinized…

During this last Russian Presidential election, many NGO stuck their noses and monies into some really bad places and they got caught! These laws allow Russia to weed out the trash…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

This is What Democracy Looks Like…

I was sent this video link by a Chinese woman who I have never talked to before. She sent an email that she asked that I keep her name silent, but she wanted me to post this video…

She was very adamant about what the video contained and her worry is that World War Three will end all the good in the world because someone thinks that democracy should be spread by force throughout the world. She said clearly that her world in China is a good world and that she has many friends who agree. The world has a right to live their lives the way they want to and no one has a right to interfere in that way to live…

Not even America has that right…

She just asked a simple question and said a simple statement…

What good is democracy? and This is what democracy looks like to me (means the video)…

Post by Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

What I see in the Western News Videos…

Lets watch a video from the West! Easy huh? Just click the play button and watch right? As long as your internet works, you are good to go, Right? Not very often is what I deal with…

I tried 25 videos on Real Clear Politics just today. I wanted to see what is up! The only videos that I was allowed to see had to do with threats against the Eastern world. The videos that show America sailing into surround Iran are very visible and uncensored. Makes sense! They want the East to see the power of the West, but they definitely do not want the East to see politicians and their wives begging for votes from the masses. Heaven forbid if the world would see the truth…

Now this is just not Reap Clear Politics issue only! This is 90% of the Western medias issue. They make certain items hard to actually unavailable for this American to see while he lives in Russia. Now I can use a proxy and do other things to trick the system into letting me see the videos and other goodies that they nonchalantly block me on. Okay, but why should I go to the trouble? All I have to do is surf Chinese and Russian news sites and I can get everything I want to see and know about and never be censored…

It is kinda sad that a country that keeps trying to proclaim that they are the land of the free and the home of the brave, needs to hide videos and other internet things…

I live with it and laugh. Except today I really wanted to see Obama’s wife beg for votes for her husband and I mean it is getting sad to see what our once great country is stooping to. To call this an election coming up in November is to lie to yourself, everyday, every hour, every minute and every second. Then you will have to keep lying, to say that it was an election after the election happens, because anything less, you will have to accept the fact that it is a lie…

Everyday they are undaunted sneakingly, “We need money! He got more money than us! Money, Money, Money and more Money! Give us money or we can not survive…” My thought is that a president that is in office, if he is doing his job and doing it well and doing it to the true best of his ability! Then he runs on his merits and money should not even come into the picture. He has had 4 years almost to show the American people why he is the “Cat’s Meow!”

But that is enough about Michelle Obama, because this article is about the fact that because I live in Russia! I am not able to see and hear certain items from the Western Media! Be it from YouTube to Main Stream News Media…

The only positive way that I can get all the news is to rely on Eastern press, because I sure can not get the news from the West. Why it is a fact that I can get more and better news from Iran than I can from my own news sources in America and I say my own news sources, because I am an American and should never have an issue to see something that you can see, whether I am in America or in Russia…

Well I take that back! If it is news telling us how terrible and evil Russia and China is! Then I never have an issue and those videos and data items always seem to load perfectly…

Kinda strange, don’t you think? No! Well maybe you need to get out of that bubble you live in and look around. Before it pops and you see what is staring at you from the outside…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia…

Lets go to the Russian Moscow Metro and use the Wifi…

I had to say I figured that Moscow, Russia would never give away WiFi! WiFi hotspots is something that is not easy to find cheaply in Moscow. Example: In Kiev, Ukraine I find free WiFi easy to get and have even set in a city park and worked on my data/communications before…

Why even the free McDonald’s WiFi in Russia has been cut in half. More and more McDonald’s in Russia have removed WiFi due to not enough seats and too many free loafers taking up valuable tables, that need to be turned over more often…

But now lets go below ground to one of the busiest Metros in the world. (Some say the busiest and some say the second busiest after Tokyo!) A place that is so crowded at times that you can not do anything but shuffle slowly from one point to another. A place that has about one park bench for people to rest on per 100,000 passengers. Now for the last few months, the Moscow Metro has been providing its passengers with a free, high-speed WiFi connection. This was done on a trial bases only at a few stations and the Moscow Metro wanted to see if it would be worth putting WiFi in the whole Metro system…

Within just one short month, commuters traveling the Moscow Metro, used the World Wide Web – 12 million times, with the average passenger spending 12 minutes online while underground. The experiment was deemed ‘interesting’ by the authority’s and, most importantly, did not interfere with passenger traffic? (What about passenger comfort?) As a result free WiFi connectivity will be available throughout the whole metro system by 2014 and on surface commuter trains by the end of this year…

Now I found that interesting and if you have ever traveled the Moscow Metro, then you will also have thoughts like mine and wonder how will trains and capacities that are already maxed out, be able to function when they are full of people riding all day just to use the WiFi? It makes me think of that person who sits in McDonald’s for 6 hours and drank one cup of coffee the whole time, as they use the WiFi that is free, to watch movies and other worthless things like that…

Sorry but sitting in the Moscow Metro to use the WiFi seems a little drastic! The Metro is designed for one thing and one thing only. Masses movements of humans from point A to point B…

But “Whatever floats your boat!” I always say…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia!

Secretary Clinton in Laos by Fred Branfman…

Working from Within or Without?

Clinton’s visit to Laos should focus on cleaning up the 80 million unexploded bombs the US left behind from the Vietnam War. Instead, it’s all about realpolitik.

Alternet, July 10, 2012

A symbolic moment periodically illuminates both the true nature of U.S. foreign policy and how even once-idealistic youth become what they once opposed when executing it. Such a moment will occur on Wednesday as Hillary Clinton becomes the first U.S. Secretary of State in 57 years to visit Laos, where the U.S. has refused to clean up the 80 million unexploded bombs it left behind, bombs which have murdered or maimed over 20,000 innocent rice-farmers and children since the bombing ended in 1973 and continue to kill until today.

Secretary Clinton’s visit to Laos is part of the administration’s new attempt to contain China, and will focus on ”the Lower Mekong Initiative and ASEAN integration efforts” according to the State department’s press release. The young Hillary Clinton, an admirer of the New Left and activist for the poor, criticized a heartless U.S. foreign policy which plays power politics while shamelessly neglecting urgent humanitarian needs like protecting civilians around the world from being blown up by U.S. cluster bombs. Today, rather than signing the U.N. treaty banning them, she fights to weaken it. As a youth she regarded her predecessor Henry Kissinger’s bombing of Cambodia as “criminal “and “immoral.” Today, she follows in his footsteps.

Millions of Lao children have grown up believing it normal to live in a hellscape where one can suddenly lose a limb, eyes, or life by stepping on an unseen cluster bomb, and where it is common to meet whole families made destitute because a father died in an explosion while searching for food, or seeking scrap metal to make a few dollars, to feed his subsistence-level family.

The Lao people have been tormented by U.S. warmaking for 48 years and counting. U.S. leaders, who dropped more cluster bombs in Laos than dropped in the rest of the world, bombed Laos from 1964-73, destroying and causing an estimated 30,000 civilian casualties. From 1973 until today the unexploded ordinance (UXO) has killed and wounded many more. It has deprived Lao of land badly needed to feed their children and caused them to live in constant fear of sudden death.

From 1969-71, I interviewed refugees from the bombing in Laos who told me that cluster bombs, which U.S. airmen then called “antipersonnel” bombs, were the weapon they most feared. They reported that thousands had been dropped on their villages, and that most of the victims were children, women and grandparents. Lao and Vietnamese communist soldiers moved through the thick forests of northern Laos, and were largely undetectable from the air.

I brought back an antipersonnel bomb to the U.S. in February 1971. Although the communists knew all about these weapons, the information was kept secret from the American people and Congress. It was only by interviewing  U.S. military personnel that I learned how these bombs, which could not destroy buildings or tanks, were designed to maim — not kill — human beings in the hopes of tying up others to care for them; how steel pellets were replaced by flechettes meant to tear more flesh if one tried to remove them from the body; U.S. Airforce personnel at Udorn Airforce Base in Thailand had told me they comprised 80% of the bombs dropped on Laos. I also learned that each “pineapple” bomblet contained 250 steel pellets, and that one aircraft sortie dropped 1,000 bomblets, spewing out 250,000 pellets over an area the size of four football fields.

I also learned how the bomblets had been originally designed to take out massed troops but, given the difficulty of detecting enemy troops in Laos, U.S. leaders had instead consciously used them, in the words of a 1970 U.S. Senate Refugee Subcommittee report, “to destroy the physical and social infrastructure of Pathet Lao areas. The bombing has taken and is taking a heavy toll among civilians. My antipersonnel bomb became to me in those years a tangible symbol of U.S. leaders’ indifference to innocent human life.

At Present Rates It Will Take 1,000 Years for Laos to Be Bomb-Free

The U.S. has cleaned up only 0.28% of the Lao land it contaminated over the past 37 years, as it has spent only one tenth of one percent on cluster bomb cleanup of what it spent on bombing Laos ($61 million vs. $70 billion in current dollars). This year’s appropriation of $10 million to save living human beings may also be compared to the $105 million the U.S. spends annually looking for the bone fragments of long-dead U.S. pilots.

Mike Boddington, a former advisor to the Lao Agency in charge of bomb cleanup and founder of the COPE center that helps bomb victims, calculates that at the present rate  – given 8 million bomb-contaminated hectares and an annual U.S. and international expenditure of $15-20 million — it  will take over 1,000 years for Laos to be decontaminated, at a cost of $20 billion.

He also believes, as a rough estimate, that it will take 25 years at the present rate just to clear “high priority” areas in and around existing villages, about 2.5% of the total  bomb-contaminated land. ”Now that we have the cluster munitions ban, international eyes are focused on Laos. But the pace of clearance is snail-like, and assistance for victims is tiny,” he says.

Sec. Hillary Clinton will likely visit the 7-acre site of the new U.S. Embassy complex for which ground was broken on May 18, which will “provide embassy employees with a state-of-the-art workspace.” The U.S. will spend $109 million on the complex, eleven times more than the token $10 million it will spend on cluster bomb cleanup this year. This $10 million will clear 4,000 hectares, 1/2000 of Laos’s bomb-contaminated land.

When I interviewed the Lao government head of the UXO cleanup on the Plain of Jars in northern Laos in 2008, he stated that if he had 10 times more money he could clean up 10 times more land. If U.S. leaders were to spend $100 million on the UXO cleanup rather than a new unnecessary U.S. embassy — the present embassy was big and safe enough to conduct a major war in Laos in the far more dangerous 1960s, and there are now but a handful of U.S. embassy officials in Laos – they could have helped 10 times as many people and decontaminated 10 times as much land.

The Human Impact Of Cluster Bombs

The human impact of the unexploded bombs was dramatically revealed on the third day of the First Meeting of States Parties to ban cluster bombs held in the Lao capital of Vientiane in November 2010. Those of us attending the conference were shocked to our core when the English-language Vientiane Times published a front-page story and photo of the naked corpse of 10-year old Pui, who had been killed the day before:

A 10-year girl was killed and her sister injured on Wednesday by a cluster bomb that exploded in Thasala village … Ms. Pui was returning home from school, and picked up an unexploded bomb (which) exploded and caused serious injuries and extreme loss of blood and she died. (Her sister) Ms. Paeng (had) injuries to her knees, body and neck. She said that after the explosion she heard her sister coughing up blood and held her until help arrived.

Lao people continue to live in fear of UXO three decades after the Indochina war ended. Last month Mr. Ladone of Nhuanthong village in Xieng Khouang province, was injured when a UXO device exploded as he lit a fire in his backyard to warm himself. Mr. Ladone was blinded by the explosion.

The human impacts include not only actual people killed, blinded and deprived of limbs, but the millions of Lao who are forced to live in fear as they walk to school, light a fire or pick bamboo shoots to feed their families. And countless numbers of these subsistence-level rice farmers are denied safe access to land they need to farm in order to survive. “About 37 percent of the country’s surface is contaminated with UXO, preventing people from using agricultural land and making many areas uninhabitable,” the newspaper also noted.

Secretary Clinton’s State Department does acknowledge the problem. At an April 22, 2010 hearing, 29 years to the day after former U.S. Ambassador William Sullivan lied to Congress by denying that the U.S. was bombing civilian targets in Laos, State Department official Scot Marciel declared that:

During the Vietnam War, over 2.5 million tons of U.S. munitions were dropped on Laos. This is more than was dropped on Germany and Japan combined in the Second World War. On a per capita basis, Laos is the most heavily bombed country in history. Up to 30 percent of the bombs dropped over Laos failed to detonate. The UN Development Program has reported that ‘UXO/mine action is the absolute pre-condition for the socio-economic development of Lao PDR’ and that because of UXO ’economic opportunities in tourism, hydroelectric power, mining, forestry and many other areas of activity considered main engines of growth for the Lao PDR are restricted, complicated and made more expensive.’

Marciel also acknowledged the human consequences of UXO:

The explosive remnants of war continue to impede development and cause (close) to 300 (casualties) per year … At the level of individual victims, of course, the consequences of death or maiming are catastrophic for entire families.

Despite admitting the U.S. has caused ”catastrophic consequences for entire families,” the Department of State has basically ignored them. It for many years provided only $3-5 million annually for bomb cleanup, and only recently increased it to a still woefully inadequate $10 million due to the work of the public interest group Legacies of War.

U.S. leaders are prone to lecture others on their need to exercise “personal responsibility.” There may be no more shameful example of their own irresponsibility than their failing to take responsibility for the deadly mess they have left behind in Laos.

Secretary Clinton Pushing To Weaken the Cluster Bomb Treaty

The State Department’s refusal to adequately fund cluster bomb cleanup in Laos is but part of Secretary Clinton’s failures on the issue.

During the November 2010 conference in Laos to ban cluster bombs, many delegates commented on an obvious fact: while over 100 nations were participating in the conference, the major nation not represented was the country that had dropped the bombs in the first place. In a startling display of pettiness, the U.S. embassy refused to accept the Conference’s invitation to even send an official observer, the new U.S. ambassador  delayed her arrival in Laos until after the conference was ended, and the only official American present was a low-level political officer handing out a one-pager lauding America’s woefully inadequate funding of cluster bomb cleanup.

The U.S. has retained its giant stockpile of cluster munitions, by far the largest in the world, and reserves the right to use them whenever it wishes. It dropped 1.8 million cluster bombs on Iraq, 250,000 on Afghanistan. And in Yemen, the Daily Telegraph reported on June 7, 2010:

Thirty five women and children were killed by an American cruise missile armed with cluster bombs which struck an alleged al-Qaeda training camp in Yemen, according to a study (by) Amnesty International.

And then, in November 2011, Secretary Clinton took it a step further. She launched a major lobbying effort to significantly weaken the Cluster Munitions Treaty, as Steve Goose of Human Rights Watch reported:

The U.S. is touting a much weaker alternative (which) will fail to offer greater protections to civilians. In fact it could lead to an increase in cluster munitions, by providing a specific legal framework for its use. It would allow for continued use, production, trade and stockpiling of many millions of cluster munitions. It includes no obligation to destroy stockpiles.

In the end the U.S. proposal was defeated, and human rights campaigners hope that the stigma now attached to the use of cluster munitions will prevent the U.S. from using them in the future. But given that the U.S. government has ignored so much of the U.N. Declaration on Human Rights to which it is a signatory,1 whether the U.S. will cease using cluster munitions is still in doubt.

The Picture of Hillary Clinton

The implications of Secretary Clinton fighting against the ban on cluster bombs and for their increased use goes far beyond the personal. Though by no means a radical, Clinton was a prototypical and praiseworthy member of the “Sixties Generation.” She first came to national attention when, as Wellesley Commencement Speaker in 1969, at the height of the antiwar movement, she declared that ”our prevailing, acquisitive, and competitive corporate life is not the way of life for us. We’re searching for more immediate, ecstatic and penetrating modes of living.” She also decried “the hollow men of anger and bitterness, the bountiful ladies of righteous degradation, all must be left to a bygone age.”

She went out of her way to praise the New Left, the wellspring of the antiwar movement, declaring that “a lot of the New Left hearkens back to a lot of the old virtues.”

She stated that a 1967 article by SDS leader Carl Oglesby in the Methodist magazine Motive, titled “Containtment or Change,” helped turn her against the war. She campaigned for Eugene McCarthy in 1968 and wrote her senior thesis on Saul Alinsky. She marched on Washington and spent the summer of 1971 working for the leading left-wing law firm in San Francisco — led by former communist Robert Treuhaft, husband of Jessica Mitford — and registered Democratic voters for the 1972 McGovern campaign. She became a mentee of liberal activist Marian Wright Edelman and an advocate for children’s rights. I spoke at a giant peace rally at Yale University in 1971 which her future husband Bill Clinton helped organize. Mutual friends spoke warmly of her during that period as a decent human being, concerned about the poor and opposed to U.S. warmaking.

It is hard to believe that, even as an earnest college student planning to “work within the system,” she could have imagined that she would one day become a U.S. senator and then Secretary of State who would support an invasion and occupation of Iraq that has killed, wounded or made homeless over 5 million civilians; strongly advocate a surge in Afghanistan that saw General Petraeus triple U.S. airstrikes and import 7,000 U.S. assassins conducting countless night raids; manage a Pakistan policy that has led 125 million Pakistanis to regard the U.S. as their enemy and vastly increased the dangers of nuclear materials falling into terrorist hands; support a new global U.S. assassination policy by drones from the air and 60,000 U.S. assassins on the ground; do virtually nothing to control climate change; support a global U.S. economic policy that impoverishes hundreds of millions of the poor while enriching U.S. companies and local elites; and become a scourge of whistleblowers and proponent of increasing illegal Executive power.

Her transformation has become most visible since she has become Secretary of State. Pictures of her today reveal the results of the inner conflicts and compromises between her once-decent ideals and present desire to conduct U.S. foreign policy. You can see in her face the “anger, bitterness and righteous degradation” she once decried. It is a rigid face, a face so different from the open-hearted and alive face of her youth as to be almost unrecognizable.

The true lesson behind this “Picture of Hillary Clinton” is not so much about the individuals who wield U.S. foreign policy but the policy itself; not who holds Executive power but what the institution does to those who do.

The indisputable fact is that the U.S. Executive Branch has killed, wounded or made homeless more people not its own citizens in more nations — over 20 million in Indochina and Iraq alone, including millions of civilians2 — than any other postwar institution on earth. If evil consists of destroying the lives of the innocent, no institution in our time has committed more evil. When once-idealistic people choose to execute its foreign policy — whether Barack Obama, John Kerry or Hillary Clinton — they wind up like the characters in George Orwell’s Animal Farm who, after taking power, behave like those they had overthrown.

Secretary Clinton will no doubt speak fine words during her trip to Laos. She is scheduled to make a “feel good” visit to the COPE center, which provides prosthetic limbs to the victims of U.S. cluster bombs, and will likely boast about the $470,000 the U.S. annually contributes to its funding. She will perhaps even be photographed hugging victims of the U.S. violence she once opposed and now perpetuates.

As she does so the rest of us would do well, before it is too late, to ponder the troubling questions that arose for me as I left a 2008 meeting on the Plain of Jars with a sweet-faced youth who had lost the use of his arm, a devastating blow for a villager who must farm to marry and have children — and even survive:

If some of the poorest people on earth are not safe from being tormented this way for decades, who among us is safe?

If our civilization cannot protect these Lao rice-farmers who pose no threat to anyone, how can it protect any of us?

If U.S. leaders cannot even now act to heal their pain, how can we regard them as legitimate leaders?

  1. As Jimmy Carter recently noted. [↩]
  2. For the more than 16 million Indochinese killed, wounded and made refugees, see “Dollars and Deaths,” The Congressional Record, May 14, 1975, p. 14262. For Iraqi casualties, see “5 Million Iraqis Killed, Maimed, Tortured, Displaced,” AlterNet, June 21, 2010. Former U.S. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara estimated that 3.4 million Vietnamese were killed, of whom 221,042 were South Vietnamese troops killed by the communists. The other 3 million plus Vietnamese, including 1-2 million civilians, were thus killed by U.S. firepower, as were most of the Laotians and Cambodians killed during the war. To this must be added the countless more that U.S. leaders have killed around the world. [↩]

Fred Branfman can be reached at Fredbranfman@aol.com. More Fred Branfman. Read other articles by Fred, or visit Fred’s website.

What is up in Russia by Kyle and Sveta…

Well it looks like this weekend we are going to the village and have a week of fun in the sun. I can’t wait and need a break from all the work that I have been doing and I know that Sveta needs a break badly. She burns the candle at both ends so to speak…

So this Saturday morning real early, like as early as I can drag Sveta out of bed! We will leave and stop at our favorite McDonald’s halfway to the village. It is in a little town and actually we have like 4 McDonald’s we can stop at, but this one is our favorite one to cater too. It is far from Moscow and still has that small town feel. Breakfast is the only reason we will stop at McDonald’s now, once I introduced Sveta to McDonald’s breakfast years ago, that has become a starting point to travel…

I am going to take lots of pictures in the village and will post some about what has changed in the village. Sveta and I have a whole back fence line to finish. About a hundred meters of fence, I would say…

Then when I get back from the village, I personally have to disappear to Ukraine again for business. I will most likely take a train this time instead of flying, as I will spend more than a few days. The amount of time I am there will depend on what is happening and how easy business will be to take care of. I have a lot to do and since I love Ukraine, I always have fun. The people of Ukraine are wonderful and so friendly. Sveta will stay home and take care of Boza…

It looks like Sveta and I have decided to travel to Tunisia in October, Sveta loves to swim and we have neither one ever been to Tunisia. Tunisia also does not require a visa from either Sveta or I and that always plays a big role in where we travel. Tunisia like Turkey is a huge German and Russian travel spot. The rest of the world seems to grip about German and Russian hot spots, but Sveta and I find them to be the cheapest and best places to travel. So we have a 14 night all inclusive trip planned to Tunisia and I will tell you more about it as time gets closer to leave…

I will say that China is very high on Sveta’s and I travel list, but it is so much more expensive than many places that it is hard to accept going there, when we can travel to two other countries for the price of China…

We also have a driving trip to get together in the future, as Sveta and I want to make a road trip to North Russia, the Siberia way. Sveta has a wonderful friend up North and I have written about her before. So we need to figure out when is a good time to travel North and when that time will be okay for her friend who works in the regional government up North. Driving Russia is a big undertaking and the distances are very very vast here in Russia. I would say that we need at least a month to make a round trip up North…

Last but not least, I have decided to continue my education and have signed up for some courses. I am going to teach officially here in Moscow and after a lot of thoughts and thinking’s I have decided to increase my working knowledge of life again. I am a believer that you are never too old to stop learning. I realize that I have a whole lot of experience and expertise that I can offer Russia and she needs it to get farther along in the, dog eat dog world…

So that is it for today! It has been awhile since I did an update on what is happening in the world of Windows to Russia…

Sveta and I say have a good week and you will be seeing some pictures from the village before long…

Kyle and Sveta
Windows to Russia…

Russia Ratifies Adoption Deals With U.S. and France…

MOSCOW, July 10 (RIA Novosti) – Russian Lower House of Parliament, the State Duma, ratified on Tuesday adoption deals with the United States and France, stipulating that a Russian child can only be adopted by a foreign family if no Russian parents can be found at home.

The need for such an agreement became particularly acute two years ago, when a U.S. mother sent her seven-year-old adopted Russian son back to Moscow on a plane with a note saying she did not want him anymore.

The Russian-U.S. adoption deal was signed in Washington in July 2011. The Russian Foreign Ministry had suspended adoptions of Russian kids by U.S. families until tougher adoption requirements come into force.

The Russian-French adoption agreement that was finalized in November 2011 was also ratified on Tuesday.

Both documents include several requirements, including psychological testing of the adoptive parents who will only be allowed to work with accredited adoption agencies.

The agreements also stipulate that all adopted Russian children will maintain dual citizenship until they become legal adults, after which they may choose their citizenship.

Pavel Astakhov, the country’s ombudsman for children’s rights, said in late 2011 that Moscow also planned to sign bilateral agreements on child adoption with the U.K., the Netherlands, Spain, Germany, Ireland and Israel.

Astakhov, who was on a visit to the United States in early July, rallied for a probe into the U.S. Ranch for Kids, a respite care home in Montana that helps children, most of them from Russia, who have suffered from disrupted adoptions. According to the ombudsman, children kept at the ranch are subjected to abuse and “are completely isolated from the outside world.”

He said that he would root to close the ranch after the adoption treaty’s ratification.

“As soon as this agreement is ratified… it [the United States] will put this ranch up for inspection,” Astakhov said, adding “unfortunately, it is not the only ranch in America.”

The ombudsman expressed hope that in five years time Russian children would not be adopted by foreign citizens.

Russia has one of the highest numbers of foreign adoptions. U.S. citizens adopt about 900 Russian children annually; about 300 Russian kids go to French families every year. Data from the Russian Education Ministry shows that at present, about 47,000 Russian children are living in adoptive families in the United States and 25,000 kids live in France.

Windows to Russia…