Tag Archives: USSR

Today in History for 28th July 2013

Historical Events

1402 – Battle at Ancyra/Angora/Ankara: Timur Lenk beats sultan Bajezid I
1858 – William Herschel of the Indian Civil Service in India
1858 – Nadar takes 1st airborne photo (in a balloon)
1943 – World War II: Operation Gomorrah: The British bomb Hamburg causing a firestorm that kills 42,000 German civilians.
1988 – Israeli diplomats arrive in Moscow for 1st visit in 21 years
1991 – Buffalo Bills beat Philadelphia Eagles, 17-13 in American Bowl in Wembley

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1833 – James Henry Lane, Brigadier General (Confederate Army) [or Jun 22 1814]
1947 – Elena Novikova-Belova, USSR, foils (Olympic-gold-1968)
1948 – Sergei Bodrov, Khabarovsk Russia, director (Katala, Somebody to Love)
1954 – Gerd Faltings, German mathematician
1964 – Bruce Wilkerson, NFL tackle (Jaguars, GB Packers-Superbowl 31)
1985 – Tynisha Keli, American singer

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1057 – Victor II, [Gebhard], Pope (1055-57), dies
1711 – Gerard Lairesse, painter, buried
1956 – Ludwig Klages, German philosopher/graphologist, dies at 83
1969 – Frank H Loesser, US songwriter/composer (Guys and Dolls), dies at 59
1973 – Royal Butler, actor, dies at 80
1980 – Cecil Burleigh, composer, dies at 95

More Famous Deaths »

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Today in History for 21st July 2013

Historical Events

1934 – 113anddeg;F (45anddeg;C), near Gallipolis, Ohio (state record)
1960 – Francis Chichester arrive in NY aboard Gypsy Moth II, setting record of 40 days for a solo Atlantic crossing
1974 – 29th US Women’s Open Golf Championship won by Sandra Haynie
1984 – USSR performs underground nuclear Test
1985 – Judy Clark wins LPGA Boston Five Golf Classic
1997 – The fully restored USS Constitution (aka “Old Ironsides”) celebrates her 200th birthday by setting sail for the first time in 116 years.

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1815 – Stewart Van Vliet, Bvt Major General (Union Army), died in 1901
1817 – John Gilbert, painter/illustrator
1826 – James Gillpatrick Blunt, Major General (Union volunteers)
1856 – Louise Blanchard Bethune, 1st US woman architect
1899 – Hart Crane, US, poet (Bridge)
1926 – Paul Burke, New Orleans, actor (Thomas Crown Affair) [or Jan 21]

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1938 – Owen Wister, American author (b. 1860)
1946 – Gualberto Villarroel, President of Bolivia (b. 1908)
1975 – Fie Carelsen, actress (Malle Gevallen), dies at 85
1993 – Henk Kersting, bureau chef (Associated Press-WW II), dies at 88
1995 – Edwin “Russell” House, saxophonist, dies at 65
1996 – Francis James Claude Piggott, soldier, dies at 85

More Famous Deaths »

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Today in History for 18th July 2013

Historical Events

1938 – Douglas “Wrong Way” Corrigan arrives in Ireland-left NY for Calif
1972 – Mike Procter 8-73 with hat-trick, plus 51 and 102, Gloucs v Essex
1979 – USSR performs nuclear Test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR
1980 – Rohini 1, 1st Indian satellite, launches into orbit
1983 – Despite being in 1st place in NL East, Phils fire manager Pat Corrales
1984 – Walter F Mondale wins Democratic presidential nomination in SF

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1911 – Alexander Hyatt-King, scholar (Mozart)
1915 – Anthony Cox, English architect
1915 – Isaack Stouten, resistance fighter
1932 – Robert Ellis Miller, American film director
1972 – Bruce Walker, NFL nose tackle (NE Patriots)
1982 – Ryan Cabrera, American musician and TV host

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1374 – Francesco Petrarch, Italian poet (Italia Mia), dies at 69
1591 – Jakob Handl, [Petelin], Austrian composer/bandmaster, dies at 40
1915 – George William Louis Marshall-Hall, composer, dies at 53
1916 – Benjamin C. Truman, American journalist and author
1992 – Viktor Louis, Russian journalist, dies
1995 – Fabio Casartelli, Italian olympian (Oly-gold-92), dies at 24

More Famous Deaths »

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Who's got the biggest, baddest computer in the world?

Today’s tech titans are blessed with wondrous perks: company cars, private jets, even a free house for Amazon’s Jeff Bezos.  But Russian oil titan Gazprom–one of the largest companies in the world–and its chief executive Alexey Miller, together have reached a new level: setting aside 119.7 million rubles ($3.69 million) for a new tablet.

Gazprom published its tender offer on its website, which was previously noted by Bloomberg. The tablet will be designed to allow Miller to constantly monitor Gazprom’s operations, while offering him all the power of his desktop computer. And the manufacturer, whoever it might be, needs to design the tablet to include 3G, GPRS, and Wi-Fi—and the Apple iOS operating system, to boot.

So did Gazprom just agree to pay $3.69 million for the best blinged-out iPad money can buy? Not necessarily. As the chief executive of a company that pulled in $153 billion in revenue in 2012, there are two concerns that Gazprom likely has in designing a tablet: security and bandwidth.

Gazprom
Why is this man, Alexey Miller of Gazprom, smiling? Perhaps because he’s getting perhaps the world’s most expensive tablet.

Gazprom resulted when the USSR’s oil and gas ministry went private, which transformed a government-backed agency into one nominally controlled by the private sector. As such, Russian interests are competing with multinational corporations, especially in offshore areas where Russia’s influence legally ends.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

China Is About To Make A Mistake That May Rival Its One Child Policy

By Paul Roderick Gregory, Contributor   China avoided the world recession that started in 2009. The wise communist party, we are told, ramped up infrastructure spending – unimpeded by the need for licenses, court reviews, or rights of way. The government pumped in just enough infrastructure spending to maintain China’s healthy growth rate. Skeptics of democracy and free enterprise waxed eloquent about China’s state capitalism, as directed by China’s communist party. We want more of what China is having over here – was the refrain. Democracy and free markets indeed make mistakes. No one promised free sailing of steady growth, low unemployment, and the absence of business cycles. Bubbles and busts have been a part of the capitalist system since the Dutch Tulip Bubble of 1637. We can debate the role of government in the U. S. housing bubble and in Europe’s banking and Euro crises, but no proponent of market capitalism has promised a bubble-free, recession-free world. The proponents of state capitalism and a one party system do make such promises. The Soviet Union promised that “scientific planning” would lead to steady growth, innovation, and the eventual overtaking of the United States. China’s communist leaders laud their “socialism with a Chinese face” in which sober and wise party and state officials can be counted upon to make the correct decisions. History tells another story.  The most disastrous blunders have been committed by the scientific planners of one party states. Miscalculations and errors of the market system tend to be self-correcting if they are left alone. Even when they are mishandled, the damage is minor compared to the blunders of the state capitalists. Some examples: Stalin’s “scientific planning” decision to collectivize Soviet agriculture cost the USSR more than six million lives and condemned its agriculture to a half century of miserable performance. The world’s former breadbasket became a net importer of grain. Mao’s Great Leap Forward of 1958 destroyed the Chinese family farm and doomed over thirty million Chinese to starvation. It was not until Deng Xiapeng freed the Chinese peasant (or they freed themselves, it is more accurate to say) that China’s agriculture recovered. Stalin’s death in 1953 stopped in the nick of time his Great Plan for the Transformation of Nature, which, among other things, would have changed the direction of flow of major Russian rivers. Well, do not scientific planners learn their lessons? Indeed they have made disastrous mistakes in the past, but they will not repeat them, state-capitalism advocates say. Think again: China’s great reformer Deng Xiaoping dictated China’s one child policy in 1979 as the reforms started. Not only was this program a gross violation of human rights. It transformed China from a young and vibrant society into an old population with a declining supply of labor within one generation. As a consequence, China’s leaders must figure out how to continue rapid growth with the demographics of old Europe. Score one major mistake for the scientific planners of China, even the enlightened ones behind the current reform. Vladimir Putin’s state …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Today in History for 14th July 2013

Historical Events

1850 – 1st public demonstration of ice made by refrigeration
1946 – Dr Ben Spock’s “Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care” published
1949 – USSR explodes their 1st atom bomb
1958 – Col Saddam Hussein and Iraqi army overthrows the monarchy
1969 – “Futbol War” between El Salvador and Honduras begins
1985 – Last USFL game-Baltimore Stars defeats Oakland Invaders, 28-24

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1910 – William Hanna, Melrose New Mexico, animator (Hanna-Barbera- Tom and Jerry, Scooby Doo), (d. 2001)
1930 – Eric Norman Stokes, composer
1938 – Bob Scholl, rocker (Mellow Kings)
1951 – Esther Dyson, Zurich Switz, computer publisher (Release 1.0)
1971 – Marie-Chantal Toupin, French Canadian singer
1977 – Victoria, Crown Princess of Sweden

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1298 – Jacob de Voragine, Italian bishop/writer (Golden Legend), dies
1876 – Thomas Hazlehurst, English Methodist chapel builder (b. 1816)
1923 – Louis Ganne, composer, dies at 61
1959 – Grock, [Adrien Wettach], Swiss clown/circus director, dies at 79
1994 – Robert Jungk, German/French/Us/Austrian philosopher/historian, dies
2003 – Éva Janikovszky, Hungarian novelist (b. 1926)

More Famous Deaths »

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Today in History for 28th April 2013

Historical Events

1789 – Fletcher Christian leads Mutiny on HMS Bounty and Capt William Bligh
1934 – FDR signs Home Owners Loan Act
1959 – KPLR TV channel 11 in Saint Louis, MO (IND) begins broadcasting
1968 – Carol Mann wins LPGA Raleigh Ladies’ Golf Invitational
1983 – Bruins 4-Isles 1-Wales Conference Championship-Series tied 1-1
1986 – Chernobyl, USSR site of world’s worst nuclear power plant disaster

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1592 – George Villiers, 1st duke of Buckingham/English admiral
1750 – Paul Ignaz Kurzinger, composer
1908 – Oskar Schindler, Zwittau, Moravia, Austria-Hungary, Austrian businessman and subject of the novel Schindlerand#039;s Ark and the film Schindlerand#039;s List. (d. 1974)
1921 – Rowland Evans, White Marsh Pa, news reporter (CNN-Evans and Novak)
1960 – Jón Páll Sigmarsson, Icelandic strength athlete (d. 1993)
1971 – Simbi Khali, actress (Nina-Third Rock From the Sun)

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1109 – Hugo van Cluny, 6th abbott of Cluny/saint, dies
1498 – Henry Percy, 4th Earl of Northumberland, English politician
1843 – William Wallace, Scottish mathematician (rights of Wallace), dies
1881 – Robert W Ollinger, US warden/last victim of Billy the Kid, dies
1896 – Heinrich von Treitschke, German historian, dies
1944 – Frank Knox, U.S. Vice-Presidential candidate (b. 1874)

More Famous Deaths »

Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Today in History for 21st April 2013

Historical Events

1509 – Henry the VIII becomes King of England
1914 – US marines occupy Vera Cruz, Mexico, stay 6 months
1976 – USSR performs nuclear test at Eastern Kazakh/Semipalitinsk USSR
1977 – “Annie” opens at Alvin Theater NYC for 2377 performances
1980 – Howard Stern begins broadcasting on WWWW Detroit Mich
1985 – Patty Sheehan wins LPGA JandB Scotch Pro-Am Golf Tournament

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1651 – Blessed Joseph Vaz, Apostle of Ceylon (d. 1711)
1887 – Lillian Walker, Brooklyn NY, entertainer
1911 – Leonard Warren, NYC, baritone, Met 1939-60) died on stage
1912 – Marcel Camus, French director, Orfeu negro)
1948 – Claire Denis, Paris France, actress (Boom Boom, Chocolat)
1970 – Nicole Sullivan, American actress

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1509 – Henry VII, 1st Tudor king of England (1485-1509), dies at 52
1793 – John Michell, English seismologist (b. 1724)
1918 – “Red Baron”, [Manfred von Richtofen], shot down in WW I at 25
1982 – Joe Sawyer, actor (Biff O’Hara-Adventures of Rin Tin Tin), dies at 80
1989 – James Kirkwood, actor/writer (Devil’s Holiday), dies at 64
1996 – Rodney Meredith Thomas, architect/painter, dies at 93

More Famous Deaths »

From: http://www.historyorb.com/day/april/21

Korean Unification: Do Not Be Surprised If It Comes Soon

By Paul Roderick Gregory, Contributor   The most significant geopolitical events of the past half century have been unanticipated. Not that we did not expect them, but they were supposed to happen in the distant future, not now.  The North Korean regime could collapse in the same unexpected way, leaving shocked politicians, diplomats, and pundits to fend with its consequences. While it is comforting to believe that predictable rational calculation and self interest determine the course of human events, the most significant changes in the world order are heavily influenced by chance, personalities, emotions, and miscalculations. We expect the two Koreas to muddle along in a shaky equilibrium that will result in the end of  the Hermit Kingdom in the distant future. A collapse of the North Korean regime in the near term would send pundits in vain searches of past writings for hints they saw it coming. Unfolding events in the Koreas and their respective mentor states, the United States and China, resemble the run ups to the collapse of communism in the USSR and Central and Southeastern Europe and the reunification of the two Germanys. Few foresaw that both would collapse as abruptly as a house of cards. The intelligence community did not foresee the end of the USSR – an intelligence failure greater than its weapons-of-mass-destruction fiasco.  Likewise, it will likely categorize the near-term collapse of the North Korean regime as a “highly unlikely” outcome. The “fundamentals” explain why regimes change and collapse, but they tell us less about the all-crucial “when.” If the Soviet and East Germany political and economic systems had been sound, they would be with us today. The North Korean fundamentals could not be more terrible – a closed society unable to provide  its population with subsistence, but it has survived as such for decades. Mikhail Gorbachev had no intention of setting in motion events that would lead to the collapse of the USSR and its client states. His goal was to repair the Soviet system not end it. Gorbachev would not have begun Perestroika had he known its consequences – one of history’s great miscalculations. Reagan was the first American President who believed that a near-term Soviet collapse was possible, and he did not hesitate to say so. It fell to Reagan’s successor, George Bush, to actually manage the disintegration of the Soviet Union, after his first incredulity wore off. The leadership of the German Democratic Republic also intended to save East-German communism with salami-sliced concessions, which kept growing larger and larger to their dismay.  The East German politburo had German Chancellor Helmut Kohl as their counterpart. When the opportunity presented itself, Kohl was there with instantaneous and irreversible reunification. Kohl did not dither when the opportunity presented itself. The two Koreas represent a tinder box in search of a random spark.  Both have new and untested leaders, each intent on reshaping the relationship between the two countries in their own way. Both appear unwilling to ramp down the rhetoric or be seen as caving to the

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/paulroderickgregory/2013/04/14/korean-unification-do-not-be-surprised-if-it-comes-soon/

World of Tanks Expands to Tablets, Smartphones

Today developer Wargaming announced a free-to-play mobile version of their tank combat game titled World of Tanks Blitz. Like the PC version of World of Tanks, Blitz is a team-based combat game that gives you access to a number of historical tanks from nations such as USA, Germany and the USSR.

The official website gives very few details, but we do know that it’s coming to both Android and iOS, and features 7 versus 7 online battles. You will also be able to log into Blitz with the same Wargaming.net ID you use on World of Tanks and the upcoming World of Warplanes.

Continue reading…

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

Preserving Hugo Chavez

By Paul G. Kengor

Hugo Chavez SC Preserving Hugo Chavez

Editor’s note: A version of this article first appeared at American Spectator.

The gushing, almost angelic praise for Hugo Chavez by the left in America and around the world has been shocking to behold, but hardly surprising. I will not bother repeating the litany here. Rather, I’d like to focus on another surreal aspect of Chavez’s death—namely, the rush to preserve and display his body so the faithful may pilgrimage and pay homage for decades to come.

Here again, I’m sadly not surprised. The far left has never been shy about venerating its heroes. This is supremely ironic, given that many of the subjects of veneration, as well as those doing the venerating, were not merely agnostics and atheists but militantly so. Recent examples include Asian communists Mao Tse-Tung and Ho Chi Minh, but the best example remains Vladimir Lenin.

Upon his death in January 1924, Lenin’s body was embalmed and preserved in a tomb, actually a shrine, in Red Square, whereby the faithful could forever honor the Great One. Etched in the marble holding the Bolshevik godfather’s body is this inscription: “Lenin: The Savior of the World.”

For an atheist state angrily committed to a war on religion, this would seem odd. In fact, however, it is precisely what we came to expect from communist regimes. In short order after Lenin’s death, poems and songs were written in praise of the “eternal” Lenin who “is always with us.” Yuri Gagarin, the first Soviet cosmonaut, visited Lenin’s mausoleum immediately before his flight so he could meditate over Lenin’s rotting flesh and draw strength for his mission. Later, Gagarin returned to the sacred site to report to Lenin on his mission.

The “Leninization” of the Soviet state’s spiritual life quickly took flight. Throughout the USSR, “Lenin Corners” were established, modeled on the Icon Corners of the Russian Orthodox Church. These mini-shrines included icon-like paintings of Lenin along with his words and writings.

A “secular religion” was established, one that, as noted by Dmitri Volkogonov, Lenin’s biographer, demanded “unquestioning obedience” from its disciples. So certain was the Party of Lenin’s infallibility that in 1925, one year after his death, the Politburo established a special laboratory to remove, dissect, and study Lenin’s inactive brain. The purpose, said Volkogonov, was to show the world that the man’s great, infallible ideas had been hatched from an almost supernatural mind.

This nonsense (if not blasphemy) continued for decades. Just ask any former Soviet citizen who suffered through the extended nightmare. A Ukrainian citizen, Olena Doviskaya, once told me: “Everywhere you went, there were statues everywhere of Lenin. They wanted you to worship Lenin.”

Most curious about this Lenin reverence and mysticism is the fact that Lenin himself considered any worship of a divinity an outrage. Lenin blasted the notion of “god-building.” He thought the most horribly unimaginable things about religion, calling religion “abominable” and “a necrophilia.” A vicious, hateful man, Lenin might have hastily shot those responsible for deifying him.

Nonetheless, communists and certain elements of the far left have engaged in such behavior for …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

World of Warplanes: First Impressions

By Daniel Tack, Contributor

World of Warplanes is Wargaming’s upcoming aerial combat MMO, featuring a host of aircraft from USA, Japan, USSR, and Germany.  The title is currently in closed beta so there are undoubtedly many changes and additions coming down the line, but we were given an opportunity to preview the current game.  Before looking at any gameplay, let’s just get the monetization method out of the way first – Wargaming is tackling the free-to-play system perfectly. Players are incentivized to play continuously to acquire more options, more gear, more everything.  This model allows highly engaged mid-core and hardcore players to play for unlocks and for the more casual player to grab specific selections for a microtransaction is undeniably one of the most pervasive single synchronous session options out there in the current online landscape. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Get Out Of The Weeds

By Michael Reagan

Ronald Reagan Get Out of the Weeds

America’s got some serious problems to solve.

Our Obama Economy is still stuck in a ditch by the side of the road.

Our campaigner in chief is running around the country pushing for higher taxes and no spending cuts and crying, “The federal sky will fall!” if Congress doesn’t stop the puny 10 percent sequester from happening.

In Washington, the incompetents and cowards in Congress can’t get our fiscal house in order, and they’re too stupid or self-serving to realize they are wrecking the greatest economic machine humans have ever created.

We have a budget to balance and an immigration problem. We’re spending trillions we don’t have and promising tens of trillions more in benefits our grandchildren can never repay.

And what are many of my fellow Republicans and conservatives in Washington — and the media — doing while America is being towed down the road to Greece?

They’re thrashing around in the political weeds, wasting their breath complaining about petty political things that may boost the ratings of talk shows but are otherwise meaningless.

For example, one of the outrages of the week involves the White House being accused of selling access to President Obama in exchange for $500,000 donations to his latest pet advocacy group.

Are these Republican and conservative friends of mine kidding? Were they born yesterday?

The parties in power in Washington have been selling access to their powers and privileges forever.

That’s why libertarians want to keep the federal government as small, weak, and limited as possible, so that when Washington politicians are bought off, they can do as little harm to the country as possible.

Another example this week of Republicans making a partisan mountain out of a molehill is their attack on former Obama press mouthpiece Robert Gibbs for not telling reporters what he knew about the administration’s secret drone program.

Conservatives looking for dirt on Obama and liberal commentators like Rachel Maddow and Jon Stewart went to town over Gibbs’ silence.

But it was just another petty complaint du jour. The White House doesn’t tell reporters everything it’s doing or planning. It never did, whether it was the date for D-Day, our U-2 flights over the USSR, or the raid to kill Osama.

My father invaded Grenada and didn’t tell Congress in advance. He even forgot to tip off his buddy Margaret Thatcher, whose airspace had to be crossed by our warplanes.

The most ridiculous complaint of the week made by people on our side of the political fence was their reaction to Michelle Obama’s appearance on the Oscars broadcast Sunday night.

They acted like it was an impeachable offense. But the first lady handing out a best-picture award at an Oscar ceremony is not something Republicans should waste a second of their time on.

It’s not new and not a Democrat thing. On Jan. 20, 1985, Ronald Reagan — who, if I recall, was a Republican — performed the opening coin toss for the Super Bowl game via television from the White House.

The first lady’s appearance at the Oscars was something my father and my mother …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Today in History for 16th February 2013

Historical Events

1900 – Stanley Cup: Montreal Shamrocks beat Winnipeg Victorias, 3 games to 1
1927 – Noel Coward’s “Marquise,” premieres in London
1933 – England regains the Ashes, thanks to bodyline tactics
1977 – USSR performs nuclear test at Sary Shagan USSR
1989 – William Hayden becomes governor-general of Australia
2005 – The Kyoto Protocol comes into force, following its ratification by Russia.

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1222 – Nichiren, Japan, Buddhist priest/saint
1802 – Phineas Parkhurst Quimby, American philosopher (d. 1866)
1878 – Selim Palmgren, Finnish pianist/composer/conductor (Peter Schlemihl)
1909 – Jeffrey Lynn, Auburn Mass, actor (My Son Jeep, Roaring Twenties)
1975 – Nanase Aikawa, Japanese singer
1976 – Joe Odagiri, Japanese actor

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1653 – Johannes Schultz, composer, dies at 70
1851 – Anne Nagell van Ampsen, Dutch politician, dies at 95
1973 – Pieter Van der Bijl, cricketer (outstanding S Af bat in 1938-39), dies
1986 – Howard Da Silva, Cleve Oh, actor (Ben Franklin-1776), dies at 76
1987 – Dmitri Borisovich Kabalevsky, composer, dies at 82
2000 – Karsten Solheim, Norwegian-born engineer and inventor (b. 1911)

More Famous Deaths »

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

How The Pentagon's Top Ten Contractors Dealt With The Last Downturn

By Loren Thompson, Contributor

The Soviet Union went out of business the day after Christmas in 1991.  For the first time since Pearl Harbor was bombed 50 years earlier, the United States faced no major threats in the world.  Some defense-industry executives feared their companies might end up following the USSR into Trotsky’s “dustbin of history.” …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Doubt cast on Sir Bernard Lovell's 'brainwashing'

In this month’s edition of Physics World, science writer Richard Corfield casts doubt on the alleged “brainwashing” of the late British astronomer Sir Bernard Lovell by the Soviets at the height of the Cold War and explains how his trips beyond the Iron Curtain laid the foundations for the easing of geopolitical tensions between the UK and the USSR. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

Document declaring USSR dead missing from Belarus archives

Former Belarusian leader Stanislav Shushkevich says a historic document that proclaimed the death of the Soviet Union is missing from archives.

Shushkevich discovered the document was gone while working on his memoirs. “It’s hard to believe in the disappearance of a document of such level, but this is fact,” Shushkevich told The Associated Press. He said he believes the document has been stolen, probably with the intention of selling it to a collector.

Officials with Belarusgovernment and the Russia-dominated alliance of ex-Soviet nations confirmed late Wednesday they only have copies.

“We don’t know where the original is,” said Vasily Ostreiko, the head of the archive department of the Commonwealth of Independent States, which has its headquarters in the Belarusian capital.

The agreement’s disappearance reflects the chaos that surrounded the Soviet demise.

On Dec. 8, 1991, Shushkevich hosted Russia‘s President Boris Yeltsin and Ukraine’s President Leonid Kravchuk for secret talks at a government hunting lodge near Viskuli in the Belovezha Forest. The trio signed a deal declaring that “the U.S.S.R. has ceased to exist as a subject of international law and geopolitical reality,” defeating Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev‘s attempts to hold the country together.

The agreement also announced the creation of the Commonwealth of Independent States, a loose alliance joined by nine other Soviet republics later that month. Gorbachev resigned on Christmas Day.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Document declaring USSR dead missing from archives

Former Belarusian leader Stanislav Shushkevich says a historic document that pronounced the death of the U.S.S.R. is missing from archives.

Shushkevich discovered the disappearance of the original document while working on his memoirs. Officials with Belarusgovernment and Russia-dominated alliance of ex-Soviet nations confirmed Wednesday they only have copies.

The document’s disappearance reflects the chaos that surrounded the Soviet demise.

On Dec. 8, 1991, Shushkevich hosted Russia‘s President Boris Yeltsin and Ukraine’s President Leonid Kravchuk for secret talks at a government hunting lodge near Viskuli in the Belovezha Forest. The trio signed a deal declaring that “the U.S.S.R. has seized to exist as a subject of international law and geopolitical reality,” defeating Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev‘s attempts to hold the country together and forcing him to resign on Christmas Day.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Right Of Armed Self-defense Against Tyranny NOT Negotiable, Mr. Obama

By George Spelvin

Angry Obama SC Right of armed self defense against tyranny NOT negotiable, Mr. Obama

A nationwide appeal has been sent to gun owners and their families asking they go to their state capitol this Saturday, January 19, from noon to 3 p. m. to show support for our 2nd Amendment rights.  In Florida, gun owners are asked to meet in the “middle of the state” at noon, at the Hernando County Fairgrounds, 6436 Broad St., Brooksville, FL 334601.

This urgent call to action is in response to the Barack Obama/Joe Biden/Dianne Feinstein legislative aim of imposing bans on arbitrarily selected groups of firearms and accessories.  One North Carolina police lieutenant warns internet audiences that ”We’re in huge trouble.”  A devout Christian, the 31 year police veteran tells listeners that “I cry. . .when guns are gone, you won’t be able to worship the Creator. ..gone. . .Freedoms gone.”

An officer who lives near the site of the Sandy Hook killings is concerned that “We are being set up to confiscate our guns. . .we can’t back away. . .these people are coming at us head on. . .we must tell our legislators…we will not tolerate confiscation or ban[s] on our guns.”

When asked what he thought about Obama wanting to take our guns, an elderly veteran at a Florida rec hall said “That’s not happening.” Quoting the soldier’s oath, he said. . .”to defend [the Constitution of the United States] against all enemies, foreign and domestic.”  He emphasized domestic.

Firearms trainer and consultant Kelly Alwood would agree with the old soldier. “[Without the Second Amendment] there is no way to resist the government voiding all other amendments,” said Alwood during an interview with the Blaze.  “Why should [the government] continue to give you your freedom of speech if there is no one to stop them? It [the 2nd Amendment] is the only safeguard we have to protect us from a tyrannical government.”

Naturally, the left is eager to ridicule “worriers” like Alwood, immediately characterizing all who voice such concerns as ‘nuts’ or ‘conspiracy theorists.’ But mistrust of the motives of governments that have disarmed their “subjects” is quite legitimate as the histories of Nazi Germany, the USSR, and China have so clearly illustrated.

To the Founders of this nation, the right to keep and bear arms became nothing more complicated than “…the right of armed self-defense against tyranny.”  Indeed, that was the purpose of this right as later expressed in the 2nd Amendment. And in spite of the best efforts of modern hoplophobes and would-be tyrants to confuse the issue, it has not changed to this day.

For as eager as gun-banning politicians have been to change the focus of the gun control discussion to one of hunting or target shooting, the truth of their disarmament agenda never stays hidden for long. New York Governor Cuomo made that clear with his statement that “confiscation might be an option” when placed in conjunction with his plans for an “assault weapons” ban.

Sorry, Mr. Governor. We’ll not negotiate away our means of remaining free from the likes of you.

Photo credit: SS&SS (Creative Commons)

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism