Anonymous ID: 3e8e0a April 8, 2022, 6:37 p.m. No.16039372   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16037901, >>16037913, >>16037951 Sussmann's files motion to bar government's expert witness.

 

If you read thid Sussman’s attorneyssaying an expert for “a sole crime” is wildly unnecessary

 

I think and believe Sussman and attorneys just got trapped by Durhamand now Durham will charge him with all the other crimes he committed. Durhams atty was so vague in his last filing and meeting that it irked Sussman’s attorneys and they had to challenge Durham, but the went one step too far.

 

Lets see if this plays out because theres no way Sussman is only going to be charged with just lying to the FBI. I think Durham was trying to flip him, and his attorneys wouldnt allow it, so now its real legal war, no dancing around one charge. This is fascinating

Anonymous ID: 3e8e0a April 8, 2022, 8 p.m. No.16039923   🗄️.is 🔗kun

So Russia’s goal is to save Donask and Ukraine does a FF killing the people there, that mskes sense

 

8 Apr, 2022 21:02

HomeRussia & FSU

Russia accuses Ukraine of ‘barbarism’

 

Moscow calls on West to stop arms supplies to Kiev following deadly attack

 

The Russian Foreign Ministry has called on Western nations to stop supplying Ukraine's armed forces with weapons in the wake of a missile attack on a train station in the city of Kramatorsk that killed dozens of civilians on Friday.

 

The ministry has requested that the international community “make an unbiased assessment” of the actions of the Ukrainian forces and “stop supplying them with weapons, as well as urge Kiev to abandon unacceptable fighting methods.”

 

Earlier, Moscow accused Kiev of being behind the attack that has claimed the lives of 50 people, including five children, according to the latest assessments provided by both sides.

 

Kramatorsk is a city in the northern part of the Donetsk region and is claimed by the Donetsk People’s Republic as part of its territory. When hostilities broke out in eastern Ukraine in the wake of the 2014 Maidan coup, the city remained under Kiev’s control.

 

It is the Ukrainian army that employs Tochka-U ballistic missiles, similar to the one that hit the central train station in Kramatorsk, the Foreign Ministry reminded, repeating the claims made earlier by the Russian Defense Ministry.

 

The Russian military also said earlier that it had pinpointed the location from which the missile had allegedly been launched. According to defense officials, it came from the town of Dobropole, which is located southwest of Kramatorsk and has been under the control of Ukrainian forces.

 

The Foreign Ministry has denounced the attack as a “barbaric act of aggression” and said that it only proves Russia had been right to launch its military operation to protect the two Donbass republics it had earlier recognized. The attack on Kramatorsk also closely resembles another missile strike that killed 17 people in the city of Donetsk in mid-March, it has added.

 

“We are convinced that theKiev authorities will not escape justice,” the ministry’s statement said.

 

That last statement is a Russian vow!

 

https://www.rt.com/russia/553572-kiev-justicekramatorsk-strike-weapons/

Anonymous ID: 3e8e0a April 8, 2022, 8:03 p.m. No.16039950   🗄️.is 🔗kun

8 Apr, 2022 19:13

HomeWorld News

Influencer says White House used TikTok stars as ‘pawns’

 

Social media celebrities repeated “exactly what the White House was saying” after briefing, Khalil Greene said

 

Oh, oh the influencers are waking up

 

TikTok celebrity and self-described “Gen Z Historian” Khalil Greene has criticized his fellow influencers for telling their fans “verbatim” what the Biden administration wanted them to say on the Ukraine conflict. Greene said that he understands why conservatives said that the young influencers were “used as pawns by the White House.”

 

Greene was one of 30 social media creators invited to a video conference by the White House last month, during which Press Secretary Jen Psaki laid out the US’ policy on Ukraine and Russia, so that the message could then be spread to their millions of followers. The White House’s director of digital strategy, Rob Flaherty, said that the virtual briefing was “critically important” to make sure that the influencers got “the latest information from an authoritative source.”

 

However, Greene told Newsweek that he was left unimpressed. He said this week that Psaki started out by describing Russia’s offensive against Ukraine as “the biggest invasion since World War Two,” and explained that the conflict would have “global consequences that will affect everyone in the United States.”

 

“I feel like had they stopped there, I would have appreciated it more,” Greene told the news outlet. “But then they started to add more to the answer that made me more skeptical and more uneasy. There were a few red herrings that made it seem like giving more attention and support to other crises was beyond their capacity. There was also a general lack of acknowledgement of the US government's role in perpetuating other geopolitical issues.”

 

Greene, who typically posts videos about black history and activism in the US, said that he presented the information Psaki gave him “as what the White House would say,” rather than his own opinion.

 

Other content creators did not. Eighteen-year-old Ellie Zeiler, who has 10.5 million followers, said after the briefing that her role was to “relay the information in a more digestible manner to my followers.” She then told her followers that Russian Vladimir Putin had caused record high gas prices in the US, a line that the Biden administration has attempted to push despite the fact that gas prices have been climbing since Biden took office more than a year ago.

 

Greene steered away from criticizing Zeiler, but condemned another TikTok influencer, Marcus DiPaola, for “sharing what the White House said directly, without criticism or opinions.”

 

“When I saw a lot of the conservative fallout from the event, saying that people were being used as pawns by the White House, it was hard to argue against that,” he told Newsweek, describing how “the information being repeated about the session is just what we were told verbatim, without criticism.”

 

Greene was not the only influencer critical of the briefing. “The energy of the call felt like a press briefing for kindergartners,” said Jules Suzdaltsev, a Ukrainian-born journalist who also operates a popular TikTok channel. The officials had dodged hard questions, he added.

 

Aside from spoonfeeding information to TikTok influencers, the White House and the US intelligence agencies have also used leaks to the mainstream media to further their objectives regarding Ukraine. In an NBC News article published this week, US intelligence officials boasted that they fed fabricated and “low confidence” information to the press in a bid to win an “info war” against the Kremlin.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/553567-tiktok-white-house-pawns/