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Monday, December 28, 2009

We Are Next.

Guys, I am not jumping on my soapbox. In fact, I am calm as a rock in a snowstorm here. I know what the stakes are and I know where the hearts of the citizens of America lie. The truth is people are unhappy and we are going to see it soon. I am not unduly worried. However, we are not yet headed down that road. Right now is the dangerous time. We, ladies and gentleman, are headed to be socialistic. Whether you think that is a good thing or not is irrelevant. Socialism does not work, never has and never will. We are corrupt, greedy beings who look out for themselves. The systems we have barely work... but they do work. There are perfect systems out there. Whether they have been implemented or not... well, time will tell. However, our country is not headed down the straight and narrow. Our principles have been jeopardized. Don't believe me? Just read all the presses. Look at who writes each article. Trace who they work for. All sides have some corruption, but I guarantee you, some have it as their main goal. Some people want us all under a system of control. Crazy? Fantastic? Ridiculous? ... How quickly we forget the Cold War.

Either way (whether we do fall into the pits of corruption and foolish ideas that we are headed towards or not) I know I will be safe. Survival is first, and I will forever be two steps ahead of those who are out to put me down. However, my job for now is to inform all of you what is out there. Read the article below and tell me we are not headed here next. Bet you twenty bucks (what's the dollar worth now? Maybe I should bet euro...) this kind of stuff is already happening. Don't take that bet.... the dice are loaded in my favor.


RUSSIA TO PROSECUTE YOUTUBE POLICE WHISTLEBLOWER

MOSCOW (Reuters) – A former policeman who accused senior officers of corruption in a series of video blogs will himself face prosecution for abuse of office, Russian investigators said on Monday.
Former police major Alexei Dymovsky became a household name in Russia earlier this year when he used YouTube to appeal to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to tackle corruption in the police force.
A criminal case would be brought against Dymovsky for "fraud committed by a person using his official position," according to a statement from Prosecutor-General's investigative committee. It gave no further details.
Dymovsky, who worked for the police force in the Black Sea port of Novorossiisk, appealed to Putin to rein in senior officers whom he accused of pressuring subordinates to charge innocent people to meet statistical targets.
"I want to show you from the inside the life of cops across Russia ... the ignorance, the boorishness, the recklessness, where officers die because of their dim-witted bosses," Dymovsky said in the video.
The clip received more than one million hits on YouTube.
He was fired after making the appeal. Regional police also conducted their own investigation after the videos were released, which they said did not back up Dymovsky's allegations.
Corruption is endemic in Russian society and global surveys have repeatedly ranked the former Soviet state as one of the most corrupt in the world.

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