
| Путин яко се е сбъркал сред парите е набъркал корупционните скандали сякаш чист е, но едва ли да се лъже до безкрайност има дълга меродавност. Комунистче по душица стиска яко във ръчица щури уестърн авоари щерките със тях натовари. Гледа всичко да краде даже може да яде в декларирани райони, а за сволочта - гувнони*, и вмирисан кукуруз за да свири тъжен блуз. Френетично ръкопляскат после леко го поднасят, но не могат да се борят а ако уста отворят, за Сибир се заминава - доживотно зазимява. Що глупендери се ширят хич дори не му придирят. Мислят го за комунист но е як капиталист. Милиардерче го раздава сволочта се раздвоява и не знае що да стори как задружно да говори? Огладняване опасно се задава ясно бясно. С водката ще о време но едва ли някой дреме. Може и да дойде Ленин в нов костюм кариран ленен и да вдигне сволочтта залп аврорски в младостта... И след туй отново някой ще ги води за носа, но за туй не мисли всякой простотия в пустошта. При обречени и лихи бъдещето е резонно. Те, глупаците, са тихи със съзнание бетонно. *гувнон - съветски посткомунистически бонбон | |
Редактирано: 1 път. Последна промяна от: If85 |
| 328 тема за Жужо - рьждивия гвоздей в меките части на демокрацията. Ей колко ГРАНТА заработихме на Жужо ... Днем и ночью Жужо с нами Колит попу демократов Демократов либерастов И носители грантов ... |
| Обьркал си се приятелю ! Гув×он това е любимата ти генетично деформирана набита с хормони, антибиотици и нитрати , нитрити и фосфати храна която погльщаш Белите Хора руснаците за разлика от мька поетите такава храна не ядьт.... |
| Жены и дети Путина - общественная проблема, а не частная жизнь Владимир Путин несопоставимо более крепок физически, чем Ельцин в его годы, но принцип формирования "семьи" остался тем же самым - жены, дочки, повара, старые друзья и какие-то еще люди, имен которых пока нет в публичном поле. Оказывается, дело совсем не в личности президента, а в самом устройстве авторитарной системы. В непрозрачной системе распределения ресурсов и принятия решений именно люди, близкие к первому лицу, оказываются в заведомо выигрышном положении. |
В состав Совета при Президенте по противодействию коррупции входят: Путин, Иванов, Рогозин, Бастрыкин, Чайка, Яровая, Собянин |
...Россия вряд ли сегодня-завтра добьется ярких побед в борьбе с коррупцией, заявил президент России Владимир Путин на заседании президентского антикоррупционного совета, передает РИА «Новости». «Люди сталкиваются с коррупцией на местах, с так называемой бытовой коррупцией. В общем, работы здесь очень и очень много. И вопрос не в том, чтобы сегодня-завтра добиться ярких каких-то побед на этом поприще, наверное, это и сложная задача, может быть даже труднодостижимая, но если мы остановимся — будет хуже, двигаться нужно только вперед», — сказал он... |
Президент Путин не коррупционер! Но он будет возмущён, если Запад арестует те активы на Западе, которых у него нет! |
| НЛО – не выдумка? Жертвой пришельцев стал бендерчанин «Меня на протяжении последних двух месяцев регулярно похищают инопланетяне! Все, кому я пытался рассказать о том, что со мной произошло, считают меня алкоголиком или сумасшедшим. Мне никто не верит, ведь кроме моих слов и слов моей жены, у меня больше никаких доказательств нет. Тем не менее, это так, и начиная с 8 ноября 2014 года, меня похищали 9 раз! Я очень хочу, чтобы меня выслушали, а, главное, поверили. Потому что потом может быть поздно…», — с такими невероятными словами в редакцию «ПВ» обратился бендерчанин Валерий П. !!! Подобные заявления всегда настораживают: разум отказывается серьезно воспринимать фантастическую информацию, пока не будет реального подтверждения тому или иному факту. Но обратившийся к нам житель г. Бендеры был в таком отчаянии, что мы не решились ему отказать и выслушали его историю. К тому же в качестве аргумента в свою пользу мужчина предоставил нам справку из Бендерского психоневрологического диспансера, что на учете у нарколога и психиатра не состоит. Все началось с того, что поздним ноябрьским вечером наш 47-летний земляк вышел на балкон своей квартиры, чтобы заснять полнолуние. «Луна была такой красивой! Большой, яркой, с необычным красноватым ореолом, — вспоминает Валерий. — Я взял фотоаппарат и начал «щелкать» её. Первые кадры получались расплывчатыми, потому что у меня не очень хороший фотоаппарат — обычная цифровая «мыльница», и съемки в темноте зачастую неудачны. Я зафиксировал мой «Кэнон» на краю подоконника, чтобы был упор, и фотки в итоге получались четче. А потом вновь взглянул на Луну, готовясь сделать очередной снимок, и обомлел: справа от Луны на небе висел светящийся объект продолговатой формы, похожий на летающую тарелку. Поначалу я решил, что это «китайский фонарик», который у нас в последнее время модно запускать в небо. Но объект приближался и, в конце концов, стало хорошо видно, что никакой это не фонарик, а какой-то странный летательный аппарат. Я крикнул Тане, своей супруге, чтобы она немедленно вышла на балкон и посмотрела на НЛО, и сделал несколько снимков объекта. Выбежала жена, глянула в небо и тоже остолбенела. Мы не верили своим глазам – все было, как в кино. Супруга взяла фотоаппарат, чтобы глянуть, видна ли на фотках эта «тарелка», но мы не успели просмотреть отснятое. Объект завис недалеко от нас, и от него в нашу сторону протянулся мощный луч света. И я оказался в кольце этого света. Я стоял под этим светом, как парализованный, не мог шевельнуть ни рукой, ни ногой, только слышал, как страшно кричала Таня. А потом отключился. Очнулся я внутри этой «тарелки». Я лежал на холодном металлическом столе, наподобие операционного, даже сперва подумал, что я в больнице, на операции. Но ко мне подошли вовсе не люди в белых халатах… .... http://ufospace.net/blog/nlo_ne_vydumka_zhertvoj_prishelcev_stal_benderchanin/2015-01-16-148 |
| Това е крайно недостатъчно. Липсват ми типичните чаршафи. Идвам на помощ на партньорите. 'Putin is corrupt' says US Treasury 25 January 2016 From the section Europe Jump media playerMedia player helpOut of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continue. Media captionHow rich is Vladimir Putin? The US Treasury has told a BBC investigation that it considers Russian President Vladimir Putin to be corrupt. The US government has already imposed sanctions on Mr Putin's aides, but it is thought to be the first time it has directly accused him of corruption. His spokesman told the BBC that "none of these questions or issues needs to be answered, as they are pure fiction". Last week a UK public inquiry said Mr Putin had "probably" approved the murder of ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko. Secret wealth Litvinenko, a former Russian Federal Security Service (FS Adam Szubin, who oversees US Treasury sanctions, has told BBC Panorama that the Russian president is corrupt and that the US government has known this for "many, many years". He said: "We've seen him enriching his friends, his close allies, and marginalising those who he doesn't view as friends using state assets. Whether that's Russia's energy wealth, whether it's other state contracts, he directs those to whom he believes will serve him and excludes those who don't. To me, that is a picture of corruption." The US government imposed sanctions against a number of Kremlin insiders in 2014 and stated that Vladimir Putin had secret investments in the energy sector. However, the Americans did not directly accuse him of corruption at the time. The sanctions - later expanded to include more individuals and organisations - coincided with similar EU measures against Russia. The trigger for them was Russia's annexation of Crimea, during political turmoil in Ukraine. Adam Szubin, who oversees US Treasury sanctions Image caption The US Treasury's Adam Szubin speaks of a "picture of corruption" US government officials have been reluctant to be interviewed about President Putin's wealth, but Mr Szubin agreed to take part in a BBC Panorama programme investigating the issue. Mr Szubin would not comment on a secret CIA report from 2007 that put Mr Putin's wealth at around $40bn (£28bn). But he said the Russian president had been amassing secret wealth. "He supposedly draws a state salary of something like $110,000 a year. That is not an accurate statement of the man's wealth, and he has long time training and practices in terms of how to mask his actual wealth." The Kremlin denies such allegations. In 2008, President Putin personally addressed claims that he was the richest man in Europe, saying: "It's simply rubbish. They just picked all of it out of someone's nose and smeared it across their little papers." Offshore company But Panorama has spoken to former Russian insiders who say they have first-hand knowledge of Vladimir Putin's secret riches. Dmitry Skarga, who used to run the state shipping company Sovcomflot, says he oversaw the transfer of a $35m yacht to Mr Putin. Mr Skarga says the 57m-long Olympia was a gift from Britain's most famous Russian - the Chelsea football club owner Roman Abramovich. The Kremlin, Moscow Image caption The Kremlin says the allegations against President Putin are "pure fiction" "It's a fact that Mr Abramovich, through his employee, transferred a yacht to Mr Putin," he said. "I was on board of this yacht at the end of March 2002, in Amsterdam. And there was a representative of Mr Abramovich… He said that Roman is the owner of this yacht." Mr Skarga says the Olympia was then given to the Russian president via an offshore company. He then oversaw the management of the yacht for Vladimir Putin and prepared reports on the boat's running costs. He said: "This yacht was maintained and paid for running costs from the state budget." Mr Skarga says the yacht was kept secret because it belonged personally to Vladimir Putin, rather than the state. Panorama asked Mr Abramovich about the yacht. His lawyers dismissed claims about him as speculation and rumour. President Putin declined to be interviewed for Panorama. Panorama: Putin's Secret Riches is on BBC One at 20:30 GMT on Monday 25 January and will be available to watch later via BBC iPlayer. Share this story About sharing President Putin 'probably' approved Litvinenko murder 21 January 2016 Video Alexei Navalny: 'Putin is the Tsar of corruption' 23 January 2016 Vladimir Putin: Russia's action man president 3 December 2015 Europe Refugees arrive in Padborg, Denmark. 6 January 2016 Denmark backs seizing migrants' assets 26 January 2016 From the section Europe Full article Denmark backs seizing migrants' assets Men work at a makeshift oil refinery site in Marchmarin town, southern countryside of Idlib, Syria December 16, 2015. Turkey accused of buying oil from IS http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-35385445 Russia BBC Panorama: Kremlin demands 'Putin corruption' proof 26 January 2016 From the section Europe Jump media playerMedia player helpOut of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continue. Media captionHow rich is Vladimir Putin? The Kremlin has called on the US Treasury to come up with proof after it told a BBC investigation it considered President Vladimir Putin to be corrupt. Spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters the allegation was an "official accusation" and a "total fabrication". Adam Szubin, who oversees US Treasury sanctions, told BBC Panorama that the US government had known Mr Putin was corrupt for "many, many years". It is thought to be the first time the US has made such a direct accusation. Washington has already imposed sanctions on Mr Putin's aides, but has stopped short of levelling corruption allegations at the president himself. US restrictions were placed on a number of Kremlin insiders in 2014, after President Putin ordered the annexation of Crimea from Ukraine and conflict broke out in eastern Ukraine. The EU imposed similar measures against Russian companies and individuals, focusing on sectors of the Russian economy that were close to the elite. Jump media playerMedia player helpOut of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continue. Media captionAdam Szubin: "He has long time training and practices in terms of how to mask his actual wealth" The US government stated at the time that President Putin had secret investments in the energy sector. Mr Peskov told reporters in Moscow that the Panorama allegations would have looked like "another classic case of irresponsible journalism, if not for an official comment from a representative of the US finance ministry". As such it was an official accusation. "It clearly shows who is directing this," said Mr Peskov, who added that such an allegation required proof, to show that the statements were not unfounded slander. In the programme, Mr Szubin spoke of how "we've seen [Mr Putin] enriching his friends, his close allies, and marginalising those who he doesn't view as friends using state assets", whether it concerned Russia's energy wealth or state contracts. "To me, that is a picture of corruption," he said. 'Simply rubbish' Dmitry Peskov with Vladimir Putin (R) - file picImage copyrightAFP Image caption Mr Peskov (L) pointed out that the programme coincided with the UK's Litvinenko inquiry report, without naming it US government officials have been reluctant to be interviewed about President Putin's wealth, and Mr Szubin would not comment on a secret CIA report from 2007 that estimated it at around $40bn (£28bn). But he said the Russian president had been amassing secret wealth. "He supposedly draws a state salary of something like $110,000 a year. That is not an accurate statement of the man's wealth, and he has long time training and practices in terms of how to mask his actual wealth." President Putin declined to be interviewed for Panorama but the Kremlin denies such allegations. In 2008, President Putin personally addressed claims that he was the richest man in Europe, saying: "It's simply rubbish. They just picked all of it out of someone's nose and smeared it across their little papers." The Panorama programme came days after a UK public inquiry said Mr Putin had "probably" approved the murder of ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko. Mr Peskov pointed out that the programme had coincided with "quasi-court proceedings" and said that the Kremlin was used to such "false-reporting", whether it was the result of incompetence or an orchestrated campaign. Litvinenko, a former Russian Federal Security Service (FS Sir Robert Owen's report found that Mr Putin was likely to have signed off the attack in part due to personal "antagonism" between the president and Litvinenko. The Russian foreign ministry rejected the report as neither transparent nor unbiased. 'Doing the dirty' - By Stephen Ennis, BBC Monitoring The recent tensions between Moscow and London have seen pro-Kremlin media invoke a colourful phrase that harks back to the 19th-Century rivalry known as the Great Game. "Anglichanka gadit" or "The Englishwoman does the dirty" is the Russian equivalent of the French term "perfidious Albion ". The female gender possibly refers to Queen Victoria or Britannia. Jump media playerMedia player helpOut of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continue. Media captionWhy would Vladimir Putin want Alexander Litvinenko dead? TV presenter Dmitriy Kiselev used the phrase no fewer than nine times in his commentary on the Litvinenko inquiry on Sunday. He suggested the affair was the latest in a long line of British double-crossings, including the murder of Tsar Paul I in 1801 and Winston Churchill's call for a nuclear attack on the USSR after World War Two. Russian derision at 'joke' inquiry report Key findings of Owen inquiry Alexander Litvinenko: Murdered Russian agent Panorama: Putin's Secret Riches is available to watch via BBC iPlayer. Share this story About sharing President Putin 'probably' approved Litvinenko murder 21 January 2016 Video Alexei Navalny: 'Putin is the Tsar of corruption' 23 January 2016 Vladimir Putin: Russia's action man president 3 December 2015 Europe Refugees arrive in Padborg, Denmark. 6 January 2016 Denmark backs seizing migrants' assets 26 January 2016 From the section Europe Full article Denmark backs seizing migrants' assets Men work at a makeshift oil refinery site in Marchmarin town, southern countryside of Idlib, Syria December 16, 2015. Turkey accused of buying oil from IS 26 January 2016 From the section Europe Full article Turkey accused of buying oil from IS traffic on an eight-lane road, driving around a huge fire in the centre Anti-Uber taxi drivers block Paris road 26 January 2016 From http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-35407795 |
| Литвиненко май го пропуснахме в този форум. Винаги готов да помогна: Litvinenko inquiry: Russia derision at 'joke' report By Sarah Rainsford BBC News, Moscow 22 January 2016 From the section Europe Jump media playerMedia player helpOut of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continue. Media captionAndrei Lugovoi: "I've seen the nonsense conclusions of your judge, who has clearly gone mad" The Litvinenko report is "nonsense" and the inquiry chairman has "gone mad". That was the conclusion of one of the key suspects in the murder of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko, in a rare interview with the BBC. Speaking by phone from southern Russia, Andrei Lugovoi derided the inquiry process as politicised and opaque, and in doing so echoed a whole series of officials here. Their reaction follows a now familiar pattern. Whether it is "little green men" taking over Crimea, the shooting down of Flight MH17, or this, a radioactive poisoning, officials in Moscow calmly shrug off any suggestion of involvement. Russia has become a master of denial. Serious claims are dismissed as part of a political campaign against Russia and their substance is duly ignored. The Litvinenko case 23 November 2006 - Mr Litvinenko dies three weeks after having tea with former agents Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitri Kovtun in London 22 May 2007 - Britain's director of public prosecutions decides Mr Lugovoi should be charged with his murder 5 July 2007 - Russia refuses to extradite Mr Lugovoi, saying its constitution does not allow it May-July 2013 - The inquest into Mr Litvinenko's death is delayed as the coroner decides a public inquiry would be preferable - but ministers rule out the request 11 February 2014 - High Court rules the Home Office was wrong to rule out an inquiry before the outcome of an inquest January 2015 - Public inquiry begins "This is not transparent, not objective or unbiased," foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told a weekly press briefing, shortly after the public inquiry into Mr Litvinenko's death reported its findings. A long-time Kremlin critic, it transpired Mr Litvinenko had also been working for British intelligence agency MI6. The report concluded he was the victim of a Russian state-backed assassination and argued that such an operation was "probably" carried out with a nod from President Putin. Jump media playerMedia player helpOut of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continue. Media captionWhy would Vladimir Putin want Alexander Litvinenko dead? Here, people have leapt on the language. "Words like…'probably' mean there is no evidence or clear claims," Andrei Lugovoi insisted. Almost 10 years after the killing, he said "there is just supposition, invention and rumours". Mr Putin's spokesman called the whole process a "joke", warning that it could "poison" relations with London. That was the broad message driven home via state-controlled television, which portrayed the inquiry as a farce. Bulletins glossed over the claim President Putin was involved, downgrading "probably" in translation, to "possibly". That is partly why there is no public clamour for the truth here. But Russians are also preoccupied. On Thursday the rouble collapsed to a new record low; inflation is in double-digits. So there is little discernible concern over a murder abroad, almost a decade ago. Of 15 people we questioned at random, only half knew who Litvinenko was and most dismissed the idea their president had any hand in his killing. "I think Putin has proved himself around the world to be a respectable person, so he wouldn't spoil his reputation," one woman commented. Strikingly, no-one even questioned the concept of wiping out a political opponent; their only doubt was over Mr Putin's actual role. So far, limited sanctions have been announced in response to the Litvinenko killing: just an asset freeze for the two key suspects. The London grave of former Russian spy Alexander LitvinenkoImage copyrightReuters Image caption Mr Litvinenko died in 2006 after being poisoned with a radioactive substance As the UK considers more, it is wary of ripping up relations and Moscow knows that. This is even more true now that Russia has deployed fighter jets in Syria, ensuring it has a say in any peace settlement there. But the relationship had been strained for a long time. And as for the UK's desire to see those responsible for this audacious killing brought to trial, the prospect looks as remote as ever. "It's more likely that the moon will become part of the earth, than that I will be extradited from Russia. It's just not possible," Andrei Lugovoi asserted. He was speaking from Sochi where he's filming for his TV show called Traitors. The latest theme is the ill-fate of Russian spies who defected to the UK, and began collaborating with British intelligence. Share this story About sharing Who are Litvinenko suspects? 21 January 2016 Alexander Litvinenko: Profile of murdered Russian spy 21 January 2016 Video Why would Putin want ex-spy dead? 21 January 2016 Europe Refugees arrive in Padborg, Denmark. 6 January 2016 Denmark backs seizing migrants' assets 26 January 2016 From the section Europe Full article Denmark backs seizing migrants' assets Men work at a makeshift oil refinery site in Marchmarin town, southern countryside of Idlib, Syria December 16, 2015. Turkey accused of buying oil from IS 26 January 2016 From the section Europe Full article Turkey accused of buying oil from IS President Vladimir Putin (26 Jan) Russia demands 'Putin corruption' proof 26 January 2016 From the section Europe Full article Russia demands 'Putin corruption' proof Top Stories Netanyahu says Ban 'encouraging terror' 2 hours ago Apple warns iPhone sales set to fall 1 hour ago Tennis corruption fight to be reviewed 27 minutes ago Features & Analysis Prostitute (Getty 2002) A gang goes global The vicious world of Nigeria's sex-trafficking 'Air Lords' Photo of boy Mystery solved Who is the boy wearing homemade Messi football shirt? Lots of tasty donuts Food unfairness Why do people put on differing amounts of weight? 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| Още по темата, после ще черпите Litvinenko suspects Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitry Kovtun 21 January 2016 From the section UK The chairman of the UK public inquiry into the death of Alexander Litvinenko has said he is sure that it was Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitry Kovtun who poisoned the former Russian spy. Judge Robert Owen said they had placed polonium-210 in a teapot at a meeting in the Pine Bar in London on 1 November 2006. Mr Litvinenko, 43, died days later. Mr Lugovoi and Mr Kovtun have long been named by British police as prime suspects but attempts to extradite them from Russia have failed. Both deny involvement. Andrei Lugovoi Andrei Lugovoi in 2013Image copyrightAP Image caption Mr Lugovoi said the accusations against him were "absurd" Born in Baku, Azerbaijan in 1966, a childhood friend of Dmitry Kovtun. The pair both joined the KGB in the late 1980s. In the first half of the 1990s his duties included providing personal security for top officials. He later went into the private security business. He served as head of security at Russian TV channel ORT and knew Mr Litvinenko for 10 years before the latter left Russia. Mr Lugovoi said this was just an acquaintance and he had neither personal nor business contacts. Mr Lugovoi said the pair had no communication at all after Mr Litvinenko went to the UK until an "unexpected" call from the latter arranged the meeting in November 2006 in London. In an interview with Russian radio station Ekho Moskvy, Mr Lugovoi insisted: "I can assure you with 100% certainty that he didn't order anything and we didn't offer anything to him either." Traces of polonium-210 were found in hotels, dining rooms and aircraft used by Mr Lugovoi in 2006. He himself was treated in Moscow in December 2006 for radiation poisoning. After Mr Litvinenko's death, Russia's ultra-nationalist Liberal Democratic Party invited Mr Lugovoi on to the 2007 candidate list for election to the federal parliament, the Duma. As an MP he has parliamentary immunity. Jump media playerMedia player helpOut of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continue. Media captionThe BBC's Daniel Sandford travelled to Russia's Kamchatka peninsula to speak to Andrei Lugovoi In March 2015, President Vladimir Putin showed his support for Mr Lugovoi by awarding him a medal for "services to the motherland". Responding to the inquiry, Mr Lugovoi said the accusations against him were "absurd". "As we expected, there were no surprises," he said. "The results of the investigation... yet again confirm London's anti-Russian position, its blinkeredness and the unwillingness of the English to establish the true reason of Litvinenko's death." Dmitry Kovtun Jump media playerMedia player helpOut of media player. Press enter to return or tab to continue. Media captionDmitry Kovtun speaking to the BBC's Richard Galpin in March 2015 Dmitry Kovtun was born in 1965 and trained with Mr Lugovoi at the Soviet command academy in Moscow before joining him in the protection unit of the KGB. He was serving in East Germany as the Soviet Union collapsed and fled with his first wife to Hamburg to claim political asylum. Mr Kovtun took various jobs including as a waiter and dishwasher. His then wife said he wanted to be a porn star and had a drink problem, the inquiry heard. Mr Kovtun returned to Russia, where he was allegedly recruited by Mr Lugovoi. Mr Kovtun said he was involved in the oil and gas industry and these "credentials" were used to help gain a visa for his visit to Britain in 2006. His first wife cast doubt on whether Mr Kovtun's claims of involvement in the industries were true. The inquiry heard he had told a close friend he was carrying "a very expensive poison" shortly before the Litvinenko meeting. Now a businessman in Moscow, Mr Kovtun last year made overtures to help the British inquiry. However, he failed to appear on a video link, saying later he had not obtained permission from the Russian authorities to give evidence. After the UK report was released, Mr Kovtun told Interfax: "I am not involved in Litvinenko's death. As for the outcome of the public inquiry that has been published in London, Robert Owen could not have reached any other conclusions based on the falsified and fabricated evidence." 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| Zenon, да беше хартиен форумът, че да накъсаме тия "чаршафи" на правоъгълни парчета с дупка по средата, че да ги ползваме по предназначение - в двете нули... |
| WikiLeaks has released 30 hours of audio recordings related to a disability program at the centre of what it says is a multi-billion-dollar corruption scandal. ......The whistleblowing organisation published the secret tapes and transcripts of conversations that took place between 2013 and 2014 , exposing details of the federal investigation into the non-profit agency SourceAmerica. The recordings appear to provide evidence of fraud within the administrations of George Bush and Barack Obama, with appointees to both presidents allegedly misappropriating funds in a government programme called AbilityOne. The programme is the largest employment programme for disabled people in the US, funnelling $2.3 billion (£1.5 billion) a year through SourceAmerica to more than 1,000 designated partner organisations. The tapes, which are still being analysed by IBTimes UK, allegedly show that almost half of the funds go to defence contractors and major corporations rather than disabled people. "It is alleged that nearly half of the $2.3 billion a year does not go to the severely disabled, but is reported by pushing the money to corruptly favoured placement organisations that recruit the able bodied or the mildly disabled instead of the mandated 75% severely disabled," WikiLeaks said in a statement released with the recordings. "The result is billions in taxpayer-funded labour subsidies and increased profits for the placement organisations." ..... повече - тук Натисни тук |
| проф. дървингов, примерите за "крадецът вика дръжте крадеца" са многобройни, но трябва да се изтъква и главната причина за истерията: Жужо става толкова популярен в западните страни, че върхушката се опасява за собственото си (вътрешно) политическо оцеляване. Животински страх. Затова вече всичко е позволено - ръкавиците са свалени, лайнометките са на пълна пара и д-р Гьобелс репа да яде. |