Featured Post

Royal Saudi hosts love Ivanka Trump

Ivanka Trump accompanied her father and the first lady on the diplomatic trip to Saudi Arabia. She was a trending topic in the country’s s...

Showing posts with label Russian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Russian. Show all posts

Thursday, January 5, 2017

The Problem With Obama's Last Minute Moves




I love a good real-estate analogy, so naturally I had to admire the way Erick Erickson, the conservative blogger, recently described the last-minute flurry of actions emanating from the Obama White House. “Obama and John Kerry,” Erickson tweeted, “are like tenants who trash a place as they are being evicted.”
Except, in this case, the analogy is a few degrees off. The president isn’t really trashing anything.
It’s more like he’s hurriedly adding the bold, modernist touches his landlord always resisted — repainting walls, recessing lights, tearing up carpets and restaining floors — in hopes that the guy who’s moving in next won’t have the time or tenacity required to undo them.

Does Obama have the right in these waning days to govern like there’s no tomorrow (because, of course, there isn’t)? Does he retain the authority to rebuke Israel and smack the Russians, to protect vast expanses of public land while filling out scores of vacant seats on government commissions?
Of course he does. He’s still the president, after all.
Should he really be doing all these things on his way out the door? That seems to me a more complicated question.

I understand why a lot of people want the answer to be yes. While I don’t always agree with Obama or his party, I happen to think he’s right about the seriousness of Russian hacking and the cost of Israeli intransigence in the Middle East. These are issues — climate change is another — where Donald Trump would be well served to listen to his predecessor before firing off tweets as if he were riffing on “The Apprentice.”
I understand, too, that Obama actually boasts higher approval ratings than the incoming president (who, just by the way, kneels before any kind of approval rating, whether from Nielsen or Gallup, as if he were an Aztec and it were the sun). This is highly unusual during transitions, when the public generally embraces the new and unknown over the old and tattered, and I guess it could lend some legitimacy to Obama’s last-minute actions.

And, as my friend Michael Shear pointed out in his deft New York Times piece on the subject last weekend, there’s plenty of modern precedent for outgoing administrations establishing new policy or settling old debts. Bill Clinton pardoned everyone but the Manson gang; George W. Bush negotiated multiyear troop withdrawals. Obama is hardly the first president to feel liberated by obsolescence.

But the breadth of Obama’s farewell agenda goes beyond that of his predecessors, and in any event, he has never seemed to be a president guided by history as much as by his own sense of principle. In this case, some of those principles seem hard to reconcile.

Consider that Obama spent much of this past year insisting that his final Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland, deserved a vote in the Senate — something Senate Republicans refused to give him, because they were determined to let Obama’s successor fill the vacancy instead.

Obama argued, essentially, that even if the Senate technically had the right to deny his nominee a fair hearing, it had a larger duty to respect the constitutional process. The people had chosen him to lead the executive branch, and Congress had an obligation to honor that choice right up until the moment the electorate made some other decision.

You know what? He was right.
But the same principle applies now. Sure, Obama has the authority, technically speaking, to govern as he sees fit right up until the day the moving vans pull away. But the people have spoken, and they’ve chosen, as the HR people say, to go in a different direction. I get how appalling that is to the White House, but Obama ought to respect it nonetheless.
(And before you start with me about the sanctity of the popular vote, yes, I know, the entirety of New York and California voted for the other candidate, but Trump swept the vast majority of the country’s land mass and the bulk of its most populous states, so if it were me, I’d save that particular argument for another election.)

We don’t have these transition periods because we want the outgoing president to set all kinds of new policy in the time he has left, with no accountability to voters. We have extended transitions so that someone can remain at the helm while the new administration gets up to speed on policy and scours the ranks of Goldman Sachs for more high-level hires.

Obama is a pretty deep thinker about the structures of government, so surely he knows that. My guess, judging from the conversations I’ve had with him over the years, is that he has to be a little conflicted about this last, desperate spate of policymaking. I’m guessing he’d rather not do it this way, but he feels some moral imperative to protect his legacy — and, yes, the country — from the worst of what Trump might do in his rush to reverse everything that came before.
But as Obama himself might put it, were he merely a spectator watching this unfold, the underlying structures of the republic are easy to safeguard when there’s no tangible cost. It’s much harder to respect the will of the voters when the human consequences seem, at least to you, potentially calamitous.
That’s precisely when you have to do it. That’s when it matters most.

Kerry should not have given his speech denouncing Israel. Obama should not be filling jobs at the last hour. It’s tempting to exploit the time you have left for maximum impact, but it’s also self-serving, and it’s bound to be fleeting.

Because if there’s one thing Obama should have learned from his futile strategy of governing by “phone and pen” — if there’s one thing that should be clear as Republicans prepare to obliterate much of his second term in a matter of hours — it’s that you can’t build anything lasting by executive fiat. Sooner or later, whatever you achieve with the flourish of a single pen is erased with about the same casual effort.

What history will most remember, unfortunately, is that you refused to stand down when the verdict was in. That’s no way for an otherwise graceful president to go out.

Monday, December 19, 2016

(Warning Graphic) Full video: Gunman kills Russian Embassodor to Turkey on camera at photo exhibit


"There's two kinds of humans: those who have the special laser to shoot an antimatter at CERN laboratory; and those with hand guns who shoot an Embassodor in an art center".
                  Maven Stark




Shouting "Don't forget Aleppo! Don't forget Syria!" a Turkish policeman in a suit and tie fatally shot Russia's ambassador to Turkey in front of stunned onlookers at a photo exhibit. Police killed the assailant after a shootout.

WARNING!
This video contains extremely graphic content and may be upsetting.



 Russian Ambassador to Turkey Fatally Shot in Ankara Terrorist Attack, Russia Says.



                                    
Andrey Karlov, The Russian Embassodor to Turkey, speaking at the gallery in Ankara on Monday, moments before he was shot.


The Russian Ambassador to Turkey Fatally Shot in Ankara Terrorist Attack, Russia Says A man, right, reported by The Associated Press to be the gunman, after the shooting of the Russian ambassador, on the floor, on Monday at a gallery in Ankara, the capital of Turkey.
— A lone gunman shot Russia’s ambassador to Turkey and at least three others Monday evening at an art center in Ankara, the Turkish capital. Russia’s Foreign Ministry said the envoy had died in a terrorist attack.

The envoy, Andrey G. Karlov, was shot from behind while speaking at an exhibition, according to multiple accounts including one from The Associated Press, which cited one of its photographers, who was at the scene, the Contemporary Arts Center in the Cankaya area of Ankara.


Others said the ambassador immediately fell to the floor and that the gunman was killed after a shootout with Turkish Special Forces police.


People huddle during the shooting in the art gallery. BURHAN OZBILICI / ASSOCIATED PRESS. 

Russia's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, told the Rossiya 24 news channel that Mr. Karlov had died of his wounds in what she described as a terrorist attack.

The gunman gestures after shooting the Russian ambassador. BURHAN OZBILICI / ASSOCIATED PRESS 

 CNN Turk published images showing several people lying on the floor of the gallery.



 The Turkish television news station NTV reported that at least three other people had been wounded. Russia’s Tass news agency initially quoted witnesses of the attack as saying that there had been an “assassination attempt” against Mr. Karlov, and that he had been shot from behind while finishing his opening remarks at the opening of exhibition called “Russia through Turks’ eyes.” The attack came amid protests in Turkey over Russia’s role in the Syria war. The Russian and Turkish governments, while backing different sides in the conflict, have been collaborating in efforts to evacuate civilians from the ravaged city of Aleppo. Mr. Karlov, who started his career as a diplomat in 1976, worked extensively in North Korea over two decades, before moving to the region in 2007, according to a biography on the Russian Embassy’s website. He became ambassador in July 2013.

WHO IS BEHIND TURKEY ASSASSINATION 


WARNING!
This video contains extremely graphic content and may be upsetting.

Shouting "Don't forget Aleppo! Don't forget Syria!" a Turkish policeman in a suit and tie fatally shot Russia's ambassador to Turkey in front of stunned onlookers at a photo exhibit. Police killed the assailant after a shootout.

WILL PUTIN USE HIS EMBASSODOR'S ASSASSINATION TO GAIN A POLITICAL EDGE? 


Ambassador Andrei Karlov, 62, was several minutes into a speech at the embassy-sponsored exhibition in the Turkish capital of Ankara when a man fired at least eight shots, according to an AP photographer in the audience.
"Don't forget Aleppo, don't forget Syria!" the gunman shouted in Turkish, referring to the Syrian city where Russian bombardments have helped drive rebels from areas they had occupied for years during the war.

He also shouted "Allahu akbar," the Arabic phrase for "God is great" and continued in Arabic: "We are the descendants of those who supported the Prophet Muhammad, for jihad."

More news:


WARNING!
This video contains extremely graphic content and may be upsetting.

Story highlights
  • NEW: Putin vows to step up fight against terror, saying "criminals will feel the heat"
  • NEW: Erdogan: Attack won't dampen effort to strengthen ties between Turkey, Russia
  • Here's what we know right now:
    • Russian President Vladimir Putin called the assassination a "provocation," vowing to step up security at diplomatic missions. "This murder is clearly a provocation aimed at undermining the normalization of Russia-Turkish relations as well as at undermining the peace process in Syria promoted by Russia, Turkey, Iran and other countries interested in promoting settling the crisis in Syria," Putin said in televised remarks. "The only response we should offer to this murder is stepping up our fight against terror, and the criminals will feel the heat."
    • Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the killing won't dampen the two countries' efforts to build a stronger relationship. "We know that this is a provocation on destroying the relationship between Turkey and Russia during this normalization process. ... All the expectation of what they want to achieve with this attack will be in vain and never happen," Erdogan said in televised remarks Monday.
    • Police officer Mevlut Mert Altintas was the gunman, Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said in a press conference. The attacker was born in 1994 in the town of Soke in Turkey's Aydin province, he said. CNN initially reported the officer was was off-duty at the time of the shooting, but Turkish government statements left his duty status Monday unclear.
    • Turkey's official Anadolu news agency reported that the gunman had been neutralized. But it was not immediately clear whether the attacker was killed or captured by police.
     Karlov was giving a speech at the opening ceremony of a photo exhibit when the gunman opened fire.
     Images of the scene showed a body on the ground as a man wearing a suit and holding a pistol stood nearby.
     In a video circulating on social media that shows the shooting, the gunman is heard shouting, "Allahu akbar (God is greatest). Do not forget Aleppo! Do not forget Syria! Do not forget Aleppo! Do not forget Syria!"
    "Get back! Get back!" the man can be heard shouting in Turkish as he waves a gun.
    "Only death will remove me from here. Everyone who has taken part in this oppression will one by one pay for it," he said.
    • The shooting occurred a day before diplomats from Turkey, Iran and Russia are scheduled to meet in Moscow to discuss the situation in the besieged Syrian city of Aleppo.
    • "We are currently in contact with Turkish authorities, who are assuring us that a thorough, comprehensive investigation will be conducted," Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in remarks broadcast on Russian television. "Murderers will be punished. Terrorism won't sustain. We'll fight it."
    • "This attack shows the most disgusting and barbaric face of terrorism," Turkey's foreign ministry said, vowing to fight terrorism alongside Russia and its other allies.
    • The attack occurred at the Cagdas Sanat Merkezi modern arts center in Ankara. The arts center is located in a posh, upper-middle-class neighborhood, near luxury hotels and many foreign embassies.
  • • Putin and Erdogan spoke on the phone after the shooting to discuss the details of Karlov's death, according to Russia's state-run Sputnik News Agency.

    Focus on Aleppo

    Russia is the most powerful ally of Assad's regime and has carried out airstrikes since September 2015 to prop up the embattled leader. As one of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, Russia has also used its veto powers to block a political solution to end the war.
    "Our task is to stabilize the legitimate government and to create conditions for a political compromise ... by military means, of course," Putin told the state-run Russia 24 TV in September.
    "Responsibility for this brutality lies in one place alone: the Assad regime and its allies Russia and Iran," Obama said during a year-end news conference. "The blood for these atrocities are on their hands."
    Moscow has recently tried to distance itself from the current assault in eastern Aleppo, saying earlier this month it hasn't bombed the city since October 18.

    A series of attacks

    The shooting of the ambassador is the latest in a long string of attacks in Turkey this year, although it's the first in recent memory to be directed at a foreign dignitary.
    A car bomb exploded near a public bus in the central province of Kayserion Saturday, killing 13 soldiers and wounding 55 people, according to Turkish officials.
    The attack came exactly a week after a pair of bombings in Istanbul killed 44 people, including 37 police officers, and injured 155 others. The explosions, which occurred after a heavily attended soccer game at Besiktas Vodafone Arena, were claimed by a Kurdish militant group called the Kurdish Freedom Hawks.

    Turkish-Russian relations were improving

    In its statement after Monday's shooting, Turkey's foreign ministry said it wouldn't let the attack cast a shadow on the friendship between Turkey and Russia.
    The attack comes at a time of improving relations between the two countries -- relations that hit an all-time low after Turkish forces shot a Russian warplane out of the sky near the Syrian border in November 2015.
    Russia had slapped a raft of sanctions on Turkey in the wake of the deadly jet incident, hurting Turkish exports and damaging its tourism industry.
    But the relationship began to thaw in June, when Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan wrote a letter expressing "regret" to the family of the pilot who was killed in the shootdown.
    When Erdogan faced down an attempted military coup in July, Russian President Vladimir Putin was among the first world leaders to call and offer his support.
    Erdogan and Putin have spoken several times on the phone in recent weeks as they worked to hammer out a deal to evacuate civilians from eastern Aleppo.





Mavenvision Stock Imagery Featuring high quality, royaltie-free images available for purchase on Shutterstock

Mavenvision Stock Imagery
Mavenimagery
Mavenmantes EyeEm collection


Madeira Beach, Florida 

                             

OnePlus 3T vs. Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge vs. Google Pixel XL Speed Test: Which Phone Is The Fastest?



The Google Pixel XL, Samsung Galaxy S7 edge, and the OnePlus 3T has battled it out for speed supremacy. The winner sailed through the speed test, finishing more than a minute ahead of the closest competitor.

The epic battle between OnePlus 3T and the world or, well, the top Android flagships, has finally happened. The matchup, which included the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge and the Google Pixel XL, was primarily aimed to determine the fastest among the bunch.

 OnePlus 3T vs. Google Pixel XL vs. Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge The test was conducted by PhoneBuff, and to make things more systematic, they devised a course that has put the three handsets through their paces. It involved opening a series of applications, including a video editing software called VidTrim Pro. For this part, all phones were required to transcode the same video file, and the Pixel actually began to pull ahead by a fraction. By the end of the first lap, the Galaxy S7 edge found itself trailing the Google Pixel and the OnePlus 3T by one app. The pair, however, is neck and neck, refusing to give each other any quarter. At this point, both phones have not claimed any definitive lead. It was, however, clear during the second lap that OnePlus 3T will emerge the winner. It kept on zipping through the onslaught of apps being thrown at it without any hiccup whatsoever.

The Pixel XL have nipped at its heel in some instances, but the OnePlus 3T was able to pull ahead, reaching the end with an impressive one minute and 53 seconds finish. The Pixel is more than one minute behind, while the Galaxy S7 edge managed to amble along in three minutes and 51 seconds. OnePlus 3T Spec Advantage From the beginning, it is clear that OnePlus 3T and the Pixel XL will dominate the race. Both devices are outfitted with the latest Qualcomm Snapdragon 821 mobile processor.
In comparison, the Galaxy S7 edge only showed up with the strength of the Snapdragon 820 chip. It is also the oldest device in the matchup, having been released in the early part of 2016. OnePlus 3T's overall advantage, however, has been leveraged by its insane 6 GB of RAM. Both the Pixel XL and the Galaxy S7 edge only offered 4 GB of RAM.

Is Smartphone Speed All That And More? One can say that speed does not necessarily make OnePlus 3T the best phone of all.


There are still other factors to consider such as the camera, an area that the Google Pixel is really good at. Then, then are those who could also be drawn to the curved edged display of the S7. But if your need for speed trounces all considerations, you have a clear winner in your hands.

 Is Smartphone Speed All That And More? One can say that speed does not necessarily make OnePlus 3T the best phone of all. There are still other factors to consider such as the camera, an area that the Google Pixel is really good at. Then, then are those who could also be drawn to the curved edged display of the S7. But if your need for speed trounces all considerations, you have a clear winner in your hands.