Anonymous ID: e80ada April 10, 2022, 1:10 p.m. No.16050253   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0255 >>0332 >>0449 >>0638 >>0646 >>0792 >>0803 >>0887 >>0933

>>16050203

tyb

 

Seven-in-Ten Americans Now See Russia as an Enemy

Attitudes toward NATO increasingly positive

 

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has led to a dramatic shift in American public opinion: 70% of Americans now consider Russia an enemy of the United States, up from 41% in January. And on this topic, Democrats and Republicans largely agree, with 72% of Democrats and 69% of Republicans describing Russia as an enemy.

 

A new Pew Research Center survey, conducted March 21-27, finds that just 7% of U.S. adults have an overall favorable opinion of Russia. Only 6% express confidence in its leader, President Vladimir Putin. In contrast, 72% have confidence in Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

 

The ongoing war has brought renewed attention to NATO. Ukraine is not a NATO member, but it borders several member states, and NATO leaders have worked together in recent weeks to coordinate their responses to the crisis. Attitudes toward the alliance have grown more positive since Russia’s invasion: 67% express a favorable opinion of the organization, up from 61% in 2021. Meanwhile, 69% say the U.S. benefits a great deal or a fair amount from being a NATO member.

 

While both Democrats and Republicans (including those who lean to each party) hold largely positive views about NATO and U.S. membership in the organization, Democrats are consistently more positive, especially liberal Democrats. For instance, 85% of liberal Democrats think the U.S. benefits a great deal or a fair amount from NATO membership; among conservative Republicans, only 51% hold this view.

 

https://www.pewresearch.org/global/2022/04/06/seven-in-ten-americans-now-see-russia-as-an-enemy/

 

 

implications?

Anonymous ID: e80ada April 10, 2022, 2:26 p.m. No.16050546   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0638 >>0792 >>0887 >>0933

(from 2020)

 

Consulting Firms Keep Lucrative Saudi Alliance, Shaping Crown Prince’s Vision

As Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia charmed Goldman Sachs bankers and Silicon Valley executives on an American tour this spring, some of his most trusted lieutenants were taking care of business in Washington.

 

Mr. Qahtani was fired last month after Saudi officials linked him to the murder of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi, saying he had contributed to an aggressive environment that helped lead to the killing. But while Mr. Khashoggi’s death prompted investors from around the globe to distance themselves from the Saudi government, Booz Allen and its competitors McKinsey & Company and Boston Consulting Group have stayed close after playing critical roles in Prince Mohammed’s drive to consolidate power.

 

In addition to standard consulting work like doling out economic advice and helping burnish Prince Mohammed’s image, they have taken on more unconventional assignments. Booz Allen trains the Saudi Navy as it runs a blockade in the war in Yemen, a disaster that has threatened millions with starvation. McKinsey produced a report that may have aided Mr. Qahtani’s crackdown on dissidents. BCG advises Prince Mohammed’s foundation.

 

 

BCG has been deeply enmeshed in laying out the economic blueprint of the country, called Vision 2030, which aims to wean Saudi Arabia from its dependency on oil revenues. A McKinsey report in 2015 laid out the broad strokes of that plan.

 

Asked by The Economist in 2016 about a $4 trillion estimate of needed investment to transform the kingdom’s economy, the prince immediately recognized the figure. “This is a report from McKinsey, not from the Saudi government,” he replied, adding that McKinsey “participates with us in many studies.”

 

Last month’s Future Investment Initiative conference in Riyadh, a conclave championed by Prince Mohammed, underscored Saudi Arabia’s importance to the consulting firms. While executives, companies and journalists pulled out amid the global furor over Mr. Khashoggi’s murder, they stayed on.

 

McKinsey led panels on money and energy, the event program showed. Boston Consulting Group focused on unspecified “intelligence."

 

[full archived article here:]

https://archive.ph/DCGfh

 

Pretty interesting stuff regarding Boston Consulting Group and Booz Allen Hamilton and their connections to Saudi Arabia. Basically, it sounds like the firms are used to launder money from SA to the US and vice-versa through massive "consulting" contracts.

Anonymous ID: e80ada April 10, 2022, 4:01 p.m. No.16050965   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0979

>>16050895

>It’s wrong dude.

>Look at your thauth.

 

The sauce literally says it's incorrect.

I just thought it was a good summary of the idea.

 

In essence, it "feels" right, with all the bots and AI manipulating the internet and search results, etc.

 

it may not be fake but it isn't organic.