control, so will the workers be able to speak freely? control, so will the workers be able to speak freely? very hard to say, i would guess to speak freely? very hard to say, i would guess they to speak freely? very hard to say, i would guess they are to speak freely? very hard to say, i would guess they are under- to speak freely? very hard to say, i would guess they are under a - to speak freely? very hard to say, i would guess they are under a lot i to speak freely? very hard to say, i would guess they are under a lot ofj would guess they are under a lot of pressure not to be too open. they are engineers for the most part and i suspect that because they are engineers like me their first priority is to do theirjobs as well as possible, even if they are working under duress they know that keeping that safe and viable for the future is very important. the plant is worth a0 billion us dollars so both sides want this plant as a war prize. both sides want this plant as a war rize.
last apblgz. hostages. if you re an american citizen you re a war prize. the translators this. is a disaster of epic proportions. i m grateful the military getting the boys out. that s why i asked the question of jennifer as i did. you saw d.o.d. give their narrative. now secretary of state is giving his narrative. everyone in washington knows the disaster and wants to point the finger. think about this, he talked about giving the numbers. he said 27 humvees. i remember this chart. we just created the world s largest military store. the taliban don t keep the guns for themselves. they will sell them to the person who wants to buy them. that s where the relationship
19 February 2021Politics
One only needs to think about it for a moment to realize that the existence of a Nobel Peace Prize, in the absence of a Nobel War Prize, is a lasting anomaly – a state of affairs that is not only irrational and illogical but, frankly, unfair.
It is common knowledge that, more often than not, the jurors who award the Nobel Peace Prize make gross casting errors and shoot each other in the foot with bullets as big as shells. One would waste breath trying to enumerate their blunders or draw up an exhaustive list of what, beyond bad taste, often borders on misconduct. A recent example was brought back to public attention by the Burmese military’s arrest of the 1991 Nobel laureate, Aung San Suu Kyi. It turns out that the courageous democrat had a sinister double – the iron-fisted woman who stubbornly refused to keep her distance from the genocidal campaign against the Rohingyas.