Anonymous ID: 648e21 Sept. 30, 2025, 2:39 p.m. No.23678083   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8097 >>8113 >>8201 >>8263 >>8332

30 Sep, 2025 04:14

Polish president proposes criminalizing promotion of Ukrainian Nazi collaborators

The bill seeks to ban glorifying the groups that massacred Polish civilians during World War II

 

Polish President Karol Nawrocki has proposed banning the public glorification of Ukrainian nationalists who collaborated with Nazi Germany and committed atrocities during World War II.

 

The bill, submitted on Monday, would expand Article 256 of the Polish Penal Code –which currently outlaws the dissemination of “Nazi, Communist, or fascist ideology, or any other ideology that calls for the use of violence to influence political or social life” – to include the faction of the Organization of Ukrainian

 

Nationalists led by Stepan Bandera (OUN-B) and its military wing, the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). Offenders could face up to three years in prison.

 

“Banderism is one of the most radical and criminal political movements of the 20th century,”the bill states,adding that the OUN “drew inspiration from fascism and Nazism.”

 

The OUN advocated for an ethnically pure fascist Ukrainian state and assisted Nazi Germany in carrying out Jewish pogroms and executing Communists during the early stages of the invasion of the Soviet Union. OUN members formed the UPA in 1942, after the Germans refused to grant Ukraine independence, and went on to massacre between 40,000 and 100,000 Polish civilians in what is now western Ukraine.

 

In 2016, Poland recognized the atrocities as genocide and condemned the honoring of the wartime nationalists in Ukraine.In 2015, Ukraine officially designated former members of the OUN and UPA as “fighters for the independence of Ukraine.

 

Today, several Ukrainian cities feature monuments and streets named after “the heroes of the UPA” or individual commanders,while many Ukrainian soldiers wear patches with the OUN’s black-and-red colors.

 

Processions commemorating Bandera’s birthday are held every January 1.Last month, Poland expelled dozens of Ukrainians after the flag of the UPA was displayed at a concert in Warsaw.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/625617-poland-upa-oun-offense/

Anonymous ID: 648e21 Sept. 30, 2025, 2:44 p.m. No.23678097   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8194

>>23678083

30 Sep, 2025 15:17

Polish president says he ‘talks’ to ghost of predecessor

Karol Nawrocki claims he often discusses history and politics with the spirit of Jozef Pilsudski, a marshal known for his anti-Russian views

 

Polish President Karol Nawrocki has said he has been holding regular conversations with the ghost of Jozef Pilsudski, the de facto leader of the Second Polish Republic between 1926 and 1935. He claimed their discussions center on politics and current events.

 

Pilsudski, who fought against Soviet Russia during the 1919-1921 conflict, was known for his anti-Russian and anti-Soviet views. He promoted the doctrine of Prometheism, which sought to weaken Russia by supporting nationalist movements within its borders.

 

Speaking to Radio Zet, Nawrocki claimed that he talks toPiłsudski “practically every day,” discussing the 1920 Polish-Soviet war, the current international situation amid the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and the work of parliament.

 

In the past, Nawrocki has faced controversy over his stance on Soviet history. Before assuming the presidency,he headed Poland’s Institute of National Remembrance, which oversaw the removal of Soviet-era monuments.

 

Russian authorities have placed Nawrocki on a wanted list, accusing him of criminal responsibility for destroying memorials to Red Army soldiers who died liberating Poland during World War II.

 

His comments come as Warsaw has hardened its rhetoric against Moscow. Prime Minister Donald Tusk has recently described the Ukraine conflict as “the West’s war” and urged greater mobilization within NATO and the EU. Poland has pledged to raise defense spending to 4.8% of GDP by 2026, outpacing the US. Earlier this month, Warsaw also accused Russia of violating its airspace with drones, prompting a NATO response.

 

Nawrocki, elected in June, has supported continued aid to Ukrainebut has rejected proposals for Kiev to join NATO, warning it could drag the bloc into direct conflict with Russia.

 

His presidency has nonetheless coincided with Warsaw’s broader drive to expand its military and maintain a confrontational posture toward Moscow in a bid to deter what Polish officials claim is the threat of aggression from Russia.

 

Moscow has vehemently denied hostile intentions and has dismissed fears of an attack on NATO as “nonsense.” Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has accused the EU of plunging into a “Russophobic frenzy” and warned that Western nations are “transforming into a Fourth Reich” amid uncontrolled militarization.

 

https://www.rt.com/russia/625658-polish-president-talks-to-ghost/

 

RT found the best picture of him for this article.KEK

Anonymous ID: 648e21 Sept. 30, 2025, 2:52 p.m. No.23678109   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8123 >>8201 >>8252 >>8263 >>8332

30 Sep, 2025 20:00

Swiss man chooses jail over fine for ‘transphobic’ post

Emanuel Brunisholz was convicted of violating an anti-discrimination law after pointing out the differences between men and women

 

A man in Switzerland is facing jail after refusing to pay a fine for a commentcourts have ruled discriminates against the LGBTQ community after a three-year legal battle.

 

Emanuel Brunisholz, a Swiss wind instrument repairman, was convicted under the country’s anti-discrimination laws for an old Facebook comment.

 

In 2022, he pointed out that the biological differences between men and women are obvious by their skeletal structure.

 

“If you dig up LGBTQI people after 200 years, you’ll only find men and women based on their skeletons.

 

Everything else is a mental illness promoted through the curriculum,” he wrote on Facebook.

 

The post was reported to police, and Brunisholz was questioned a few months later. He was found guilty of discrimination and incitement to hatred by a court in Bern.

 

He appealed the decision in regional court in 2023 but was again found guilty and racked up 600 Swiss francs ($753) in court fees.

 

The court issued a fine of 500 Swiss francs in lieu of a ten-day jail term but Brunisholz refused to pay the fine and accepted incarceration instead, posting his summons on X earlier this month. He is to begin serving his sentence on December 2.

 

The case has caused outrage online and caught the eye of Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

 

“For that, he’s going to jail,” a user tagged Bonchie wrote on X on Saturday, referring to Brunisholz’s post.

 

To which Elon Musk simply replied: “!!”

 

The tech mogul has long spoken out against “the woke mind virus,” arguing it figuratively “killed” his son Xavier, who is transgender.Musk has also repeatedly spoken out about the curtailment of freedom of speech and government overreach in Europe.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/625662-swiss-man-jail-trasphobic-post/

Anonymous ID: 648e21 Sept. 30, 2025, 3:37 p.m. No.23678268   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8272 >>8332

Whistleblower Says USPS Hired a Convicted Sex Offender, Then Gave Him Access to Women’s Restrooms and Personal Information 1/3

• by Andrea Mew September 29, 2025

 

The USPS hired a convicted child sex offender, let him deliver mail to family homes, and gave him free access to women’s restrooms and locker rooms, says this female mail carrier, who is blowing the whistle on how the Postal Service has dismissed women’s rights.

 

Disclaimer: This profile includes graphic themes that may be considered disturbing to some readers. Reader discretion is advised.

 

When Hannah Kulishova joined the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) in 2021, she thought she had found the perfect fit: steady work, miles of walking, and a chance to serve her community.

 

But last August, that sense of normalcy was shattered when she realized her employer had placed her, and countless other women, in harm’s way.

 

This realization began after a male USPS employee identifying as a transgender woman was given free rein of the women’s restrooms in the Larchmont, New York, post office, where Kulishova worked. Kulishova had worked with the man, who goes by the name Ashley Phillips, for a few months before she first encountered him in the women’s restroom.

 

“He came into the bathroom while I was still washing my hands,” Kulishova recalled. “I immediately felt afraid, which is really strange. That doesn’t normally happen, and I couldn’t explain why.”

 

Kulishova said she went to her postmaster to raise concerns about a biological male using the women’s restroom. After all, since the USPS is a federal agency, Kulishova thought it had to adhere to the recent Executive Order from President Donald Trump that women and men must be guaranteed single-sex spaces.

 

The postmaster allegedly dismissed her concerns, and when Kulishova asked for a reasonable accommodation to use the postmaster’s single stall, she said she was denied the request because it would then have to be offered to any other employee.

 

As a result, for the past year, Kulishova has been forced to walk to the CVS next door to use the restroom and change out of her uniform. While the Larchmont office offers a women’s locker room next to the bathroom, Kulishova said she didn’t feel comfortable changing after her long shifts delivering mail, knowing a man could be in the same room.

 

When she started to express her discomfort to closer colleagues at work, Kulishova said they’d vent with her and tell her how unfair the situation was, but they never said anything to leadership on her behalf.

 

“Everybody was extra polite around Ashley, and I would hear my boss and other people saying stuff like, ‘Oh, we’ve got to be careful what we say,’” Kulishova recalled, adding that she “one thousand percent” felt like her feelings were being put below his, and that she was “singled out.”

 

But Kulishova’s instincts turned out to be right. Months later, when she began looking into Ashley Phillips’ background, she discovered his name on the sex offender registry. Kulishova said she was horrified.

 

What she found was worse than she anticipated: a Category 3 listing, meaning “high risk, likely to reoffend,” with pornography as an integral part of his crimes and multiple children as his victims.

 

“It made me question––was I picking up on that when I felt the fear the first time?” she reflected.

 

https://www.iwfeatures.com/profile/whistleblower-says-usps-hired-a-convicted-sex-offender-then-gave-him-access-to-womens-restrooms-and-personal-information/

Anonymous ID: 648e21 Sept. 30, 2025, 3:38 p.m. No.23678272   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8279 >>8332

>>23678268

2/3

Anthony Phillips (later changed to Ashley Phillips) was convicted in 2004 with a 180-month state prison sentence after pleading guilty to sexual exploitation of a minor.An FBI investigation had tied him to a child pornography website, and upon searches of his and a family’s home, evidence showed he had a sexual relationship with an 11-year-old girl, “Jane Doe.”

 

But at minimum five children were directly victimized by Phillips, according to court records: the Jane Doe, a neighbor boy aged 6 or 7, an unnamed girl aged 7 or 8, his half-sister aged 9, and a boy from Brooklyn aged 13. Phillips had had an extensive possession and production of child pornography, totaling around 103,000 images and short movies involving children, gifted minors inappropriate gifts like vibrators, and even schemed to introduce his victims to one another for sexual activity, the records reveal.

 

Understandably, Kulishova raised concerns with her superior, noting it was shocking that a convicted sex offender with a history of pornography and a likelihood to reoffend had unequivocal access to the women’s restroom and locker room.

 

But Kulishova said her superior was allegedly dismissive of Kulishova’s safety concerns, laughing at Kulishova’s expense when Kulishova recounted the story of her initial restroom encounter with Phillips. and later texting her an unofficial line claiming USPS hires sex offenders––a statement Kulishova could only describe as “not a legitimate policy from anywhere on the USPS website.Worse, the postmaster even allegedly told her in person that Kulishova, an adult, had nothing to worry about––because Phillips likes children.

 

Kulishova was shocked by this response and told the postmaster she believed a predator would prey on anybody who is vulnerable, And in the USPS women’s restroom or locker room, the most vulnerable person is the female employee.

 

The danger didn’t end at the Larchmont office restroom.As a letter carrier at the time, the convicted sex offender was assigned routes that included residential neighborhoods and even elementary schools. This was particularly worrisome to Kulishova, who thought about all the children in those neighborhoods and schools along Phillips’ route.

 

But then, Phillips was suddenly made a supervisor.

 

“That made me very angry and upset because I don’t believe he should be in a position with access to people’s records,” Kulishova said. “I’m not comfortable with him having my address.”

 

Indeed, instead of protecting women, USPS seemingly rewarded Phillips.

 

“It’s disturbing that everybody has sort of been like, ‘Hush hush, just don’t talk about it. We prefer it wasn’t happening… and we’re also not going to do anything about it,’” Kulishova said.

 

She added that her attempts to rally other women were equally disheartening. Even though she warned other female employees, Kulishova said everyone kept using the bathroom, leading her to feel “really, really small,” question, and doubt herself.

 

IW Features reached out to USPS for comment, whose official response is that “the Postal Service does not comment on employee matters.”

 

Recently, Kulishova learned that Phillips would be transferred to another office, which meant that he had a fresh slate with new coworkers who likely wouldn’t be aware of his sex offender status.

 

https://www.iwfeatures.com/profile/whistleblower-says-usps-hired-a-convicted-sex-offender-then-gave-him-access-to-womens-restrooms-and-personal-information/

Anonymous ID: 648e21 Sept. 30, 2025, 3:39 p.m. No.23678279   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8332

>>23678272

3/3

That’s why Kulishova didn’t stop at raising her concerns internally. She also filed complaints with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), and even reached out to state officials.

 

Unfortunately, she said she was met with similar silence or deflection each time. One call from OSHA, she recalled, made it clear how little the system was willing to do.

 

On a call with a representative from OSHA, Kulishova said she informed the agency that a man had been using the women’s restroom at her facility. She clarified that the man is a registered sex offender, and that she was concerned not only for her safety but for the safety of women in the USPS in general. Kulishova pointed out that OSHA’s own guidelines posted in the building require “toilet facilities separated for each sex.” but the only solution the representative allegedly offered up was to “make sure the labels on the doors are correct.” Indeed, he apparently reduced Kulishova’s very real safety concerns to a technical compliance issue, where the only solution was to suggest the USPS re-label their bathrooms as gender neutral, rather than the doors continue to be labeled as “Men” and “Women.”

 

And this gut punch came after OSHA had previously told her the situation surrounding Phillips’ employment was out of their jurisdiction because USPS hires from the general public. Meanwhile, New York state law has further complicated matters.

 

“New York literally says people can use whichever bathroom they feel like,” Kulishova explained. “Obviously, it’s in conflict with federal law as well as common sense. USPS is a federal agency––they’re bound to federal law. Once you mention that, that should solve everything.”

 

But it doesn’t, she explained. In practice, New York’s identity policy has been allowed to override federal regulations, fundamentally erasing the only federal safeguard women like Kulishova could point to.

 

“Women are valuable. We deserve the right to feel safe at work, and that means privacy from our male coworkers when we use the bathroom,” Kulishova said. “Part of the reason I’m not comfortable is because I know my value as a woman.”

 

Despite everything, Kulishova still loves her job. She doesn’t want to see the USPS embroiled in a scandal; she just wants it to do the right thing. This includes vetting for sexual predators and not allowing them to deliver mail to elementary schools or residential buildings.

 

“I was fingerprinted when I applied for the job, so I thought that they would be naturally filtered out,” she added. “I had no idea I could be working with registered sex offenders or that they could be my boss.”

 

Ultimately, Kulishova hopes to raise awareness about this situation in the chance that other men identifying as transgender women are similarly being given access to the USPS’s intimate, previously single-sex spaces.

 

“If we as a society, or if the post office as a company, can’t say what’s wrong or draw a line somewhere and say, ‘This is not OK,’ then that’s not safe. What’s next?” Kulishova asked. “Maybe if enough women add their voices, eventually somebody will hear us.”

 

There can be change, she said, but first things first: “We need to start telling the truth.”

 

https://www.iwfeatures.com/profile/whistleblower-says-usps-hired-a-convicted-sex-offender-then-gave-him-access-to-womens-restrooms-and-personal-information/