Anonymous ID: 98e073 April 7, 2021, 7:54 a.m. No.13377741   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7823 >>8117 >>8419

Change of Narrative needed? Why? Sum Ting Habbening?

Russia, Russia, Russia…

 

Russia is testing a nuclear torpedo in the Arctic that has the power to trigger radioactive tsunamis off the US coast

 

Russia is reportedly planning to deploy a nuclear-powered missile to the Arctic next summer which is designed to detonate off the coastlines of enemy countries, as the country amasses a growing presence in the region, CNN reported.

 

Satellite images this week provided to CNN by Maxar, a satellite company, indicate that is Russia testing new weapons in the region and building significant military infrastructure there, which is increasingly free of ice due to climate change.

 

CNN reported that Russia will deploy the Poseidon 2M39 missile to its Arctic region next summer, which has been referred to in reports as a "doomsday" device due to its devastating power.

 

The device, images of which first surfaced on Russian state television in 2015, is an underwater nuclear torpedo that is designed to hit the ocean floor, kicking up a radioactive tsunami that could spread deadly radiation over thousands of miles of land, rendering it uninhabitable.

 

Russian President Vladimir Putin requested an update on a "key stage" of the tests in February from his defense minister and further tests are expected later this year, the Times of London newspaper reported.

 

Russia and NATO countries with a presence in the Arctic region have both been increasing their activity there in recent years as rising sea temperatures make it more accessible, Insider's Christopher Woody reported.

 

Russia has the world's longest Arctic coastline and derives around a quarter of its GDP from the region, and the Northern Sea Route is a valuable shipping corridor for Moscow.

 

The Pentagon on Monday said it was watching reports of Russian military activities and infrastructure build-ups in the Arctic "very closely."

 

"Without getting into specific intelligence assessments, obviously we're monitoring it very closely," said Pentagon press secretary John F. Kirby at a briefing Monday.

 

"Obviously we're watching this, and as I said before, we have national security interests there that we know … we need to protect and defend," Kirby said.

 

"And as I said, nobody's interested in seeing the Arctic become militarized."

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/russia-testing-nuclear-torpedo-arctic-125433425.html

Anonymous ID: 98e073 April 7, 2021, 8:29 a.m. No.13377913   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7937

Dog Comms

 

'Dog Whisperer' Cesar Millan defends Major Biden following incidents: 'We can’t blame the dog'

 

The “Dog Whisperer” himself Cesar Millan called into Fox News Primetime Tuesday, where he came to the defense of President Biden’s dog, Major, following the presidential pup’s second nipping incident which occurred on the White House lawn last week. Earlier in March, Major caused a minor injury to someone at the White House in a similar incident.

 

Host Mark Steyn blamed the incidents on tension in the White House, but Millan said that’s not necessarily the case.

 

“Animals do react from the energy in the environment, but this is a perfect example of not having a safety protocol to introduce dogs into the White House, right? So, it’s the same protocol for any house. It’s just accidents happen because there is no safe protocol,” Millan said. “So we can't blame the dog. That's the first thing we have to understand is, we can't blame the dog. We have to take full responsibility of how to introduce a dog into an environment first, and then introduce the dog to new people so he gains the trust, the respect and the love. Then you have harmony.”

 

Steyn went on to question whether the number of people working at the White House is the problem, along with the fact that Biden’s dogs are walked by staff. But Millan explained that being around a lot of people is actually a good thing for dogs.

 

“Doesn’t that complicate the situation?” Steyn asked. “Absolutely not,” Millan replied. “That makes him more social. He has more friends. This is a big opportunity here. If everybody understands the same thing and practices the same behavior, everybody’s going to be Major’s best friend.”

 

Steyn then questioned if Major’s problem is that he’s a rescue, but Millan was quick to put an end to that line of thinking.

 

“We all have issues. We all come with issues. After 20 years of age, people have issues,” Millan said. “So, a rescue dog is a dog that had issues and they were placed into a shelter. It doesn't mean he can't go back to normal, you know? So, back to normal means the human gives exercise, mental stimulation and affection. Body, mind, heart. That returns him back to normal. A normal that people didn’t give. So rescue dog doesn't mean they are broken. Rescue dog means they had a human prior to them that didn't know how to fulfill the life of a dog.”

 

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/dog-whisperer-cesar-millan-defends-major-biden-following-incidents-we-cant-blame-dog-072048443.html

Anonymous ID: 98e073 April 7, 2021, 9:57 a.m. No.13378302   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8419

Pan? Double meanings?

 

Interpol issues 'red notice' for MIT graduate accused of murdering Yale student

 

The United States Marshals Service has secured a "red notice" through Interpol in the search for Qinxuan Pan, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology graduate student who is accused of murdering Yale University graduate student Kevin Jiang.

 

Interpol, formally known as the International Criminal Police Organization, publishes a red notice at the request of a member country for law enforcement worldwide to locate and provisionally arrest a person pending extradition, surrender or similar legal action. A red notice is an international wanted persons notice, not an international arrest warrant, according to Interpol's website.

 

The move came more than a month after the U.S. Marshals expanded its manhunt nationwide for 29-year-old Pan, who is wanted for murder and second-degree larceny. Pan, described as a 6-foot Asian American man weighing 170 pounds, was last seen in the early morning hours of Feb. 11 driving with family members in the Brookhaven or Duluth areas of Georgia. Relatives said he was carrying a black backpack and acting strange, according to the U.S. Marshals.

 

Panis the primary suspect in the Feb. 6 slaying of 26-year-old Jiang, who was shot and killed on a street in New Haven, Connecticut. Police found Jiang dead from multiple gunshot wounds that night in the East Rock neighborhood, near Yale University's campus. Police said Jiang was operating a vehicle at the time of the shooting but declined to say if he was inside or outside the car when he was killed. Authorities are investigating whether Jiang was targeted or if the shooting followed a road rage incident.

 

Jiang, a former member of the Army National Guard, had recently gotten engaged and was a graduate student at the Yale School of Environment, according to the university's president.

 

In late February, the New Haven Police Department obtained an arrest warrant charging Pan with murder, with a $5 million bond. Police had previously only named Pan as a person of interest in Jiang's killing.

 

Pan was accused of stealing a car from a dealership in Mansfield, Massachusetts, and swapping the plates on the day of the murder. The vehicle was found abandoned in a scrap yard in New Haven where it had gotten stuck on some railroad tracks, according to an application requesting a warrant for Pan's arrest on the larceny charge.

 

Pan, who was born in Shanghai and lived in Malden, about five miles north of Boston, received undergraduate degrees in computer science and mathematics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge in June 2014. He has been enrolled as a graduate student in MIT's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science since September 2014, according to the school.

 

The U.S. Marshals is offering a reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to Pan's direct location and arrest. Anyone with information on his whereabouts is urged to contact the U.S. Marshals at 1-877-926-8332 or submit tips online at www.usmarshals.gov/tips.

 

"Pan should be considered armed and dangerous," the U.S. Marshals said. "Individuals should not attempt to apprehend him themselves."

 

https://www.yahoo.com/gma/interpol-issues-red-notice-mit-100825447.html