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이달의소녀탐구 #237 (LOONA TV #237) - Duration: 0:59.ViVi: It's a secret...
HaSeul: We're carrying out a secret operation.
HaSeul: Lend some money from our executive director...!
(Why does she want to lend money from him all of the sudden?)
ViVi: Director...
ViVi: Pelase lend me 20,000 won~
ViVI: I'll go and get some fried food!
(That bright smile...)
'Okay' ViVi: Thank you~!
HaSeul: Wow.. I've never seen such a big fried food before...!
ViVi: I"ve never eaten this...
ViVi: It's so cool~
ViVi: Let me have some more, please~
(They actually got much more fried food because of ViVi's acting cute!)
ViVi: It smells very good!
HaSeul, ViVi: Thank you~
ViVi: It's fried shrimp~
'Thank you for the food'
'Very delicious!'
ViVi: Tasty~!
ViVi: It's my first time and so interesting.
#NowPlaying "이달의 소녀 1/3 (LOOΠΔ 1/3) - 지금, 좋아해(Love&Live)"
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Boulet Brothers DRAGULA Season Two: Episode Eight - Duration: 45:45.(eerie music)
(owls hooting) (wolf howling)
- [Announcer] Previously on Dragula.
(upbeat music)
- We're all going to Wasteland Weekend.
It's about heavy metal, big guns, loud music.
Thousands of freaks rolling around in giant tanks
with flame throwers and turrets on them.
- For the first segment of your challenge,
we've arranged a photoshoot.
Thee second part of your challenge is the main event.
You're gonna be performing live
on the Wasteland Weekend stage.
- I'm really excited about this concept
we came up with for our performance
as the Four Horsemen.
- We won't be judging you alone.
Please welcome your queen,
Vander Von Odd!
(heavy metal music)
♪ Drag, filth, horror
♪ Glamor
♪ Dragula
♪ Killer Queen Dragula
♪ She'll make you scream
♪ Drag, Drag, Drag, Drag, Dragula ♪
- [Host] The winner of Dragula
receives a cash prize of $10,000,
courtesy of DragQueenMerch.com,
and the title of Dragula,
the world's next Drag Superstar!
♪ Drag, Drag, Drag, Drag, Dragula ♪
(woman screams)
(heavy rock music)
- James for sure killed the photo challenge.
- What?
Oh stop it, you with your smoke
behind you and in front of you,
the dimension was fucking odd! - You look maniacal,
you look fucking crazy in those.
(all laugh) - I didn't recognize you.
- Aborrah, your look did not impress me
in the photoshoot. - Really?
- Just because I didn't understand it,
I knew you were going for that food thing.
- Famine. - Famine (laughs).
But cohesively I didn't get it until I saw--
(all gasp)
(multiple people speaking at once)
Welcome to our fancy tent.
- How are you all?
That shit was fucking amazing,
that was a lot of fun.
I just wanna like step in
and have like a little kiki moment
with y'all after seeing your journey
through this competition, being able to watch you all
through the rafters of the theater
like a Phantom, spying on you,
and seeing you all grow,
it's really been amazing to see you all embark
on this journey and make it this far.
(cymbal crash)
What has Dragula been for you ladies.
- Well every challenge I've taken away a new lesson,
and sort of like really learned something
from each of you.
Every single one of you has added
a piece to what is now me.
Why are you rolling your eyes right now?
- I'm not! (all laugh)
I'm not it was all (mumbles)
I swear, I was like oh really,
that's how you feel (mumbles).
- Right now, I feel like a more complete self.
- I see that, I see that in you,
I see that in a lot of you, a much more complete self,
once you leave Dragula,
you step out of the world with a mind state
of like what the fuck can you throw at me
that I couldn't handle
or didn't do already on Dragula, you know?
- I didn't think about that. (all laugh)
Vander has done so much to Dragula forward.
She's really a good source of information.
- I did not expect half this much,
especially seeing season one, we're like what can we do
to like really top what they did?
Fuck. (all laugh)
- No, you bitches came to play,
and that was something true right off the bat,
that first runway, we were all just like jaws on the floor.
It's only the second season, season one
kind of set up what the show was gonna be like,
and season two was us finally seeing,
okay now that there is a formula established,
what is gonna come of it from people
who saw season one, and like y'all fucking came to play,
that first episode we were all just like dumbstruck
by the amount of craftsmanship that was on the stage.
- This whole show is changing the face of drag,
but this top four?
Girl.
I just feel like it's the most surrealist thing
that's ever happened to me.
Like this is my job,
and the fact that I get this platform,
to be with this talented cast,
and to be expressing my artistry.
I'm speechless man, like a year ago,
I was doing tip spots just to pay my rent, you know?
Like I do drag full time,
it's fucking surreal that I'm in a room
with such talented artists
and we all look bomb as fuck right now.
(all laugh)
- You look fucking good.
So James, what has your journey in Dragula
meant for you?
- Y'know it's been a really crazy ride for me,
but like the brothers have taught me a lot
with all these challenges
and things they put us through,
but honestly I feel like I've learned the most
from the girls.
Like the first week, these girls legit did not like me,
none of them, they all told me
to my face they didn't like me also, and that made me
really think about how my persona is, because I'm really not
a bitch or a cunt, and I think these girls realize that,
that's just my funny, fake attitude
when I'm in drag, and I've kinda learned
to shut that away, and be more of who I am I think now,
I think Dragula's taught me to really like love myself
for who I am and not the character that I put out there.
- I love that. - It's given me a lot.
A lot, and I'm really grateful for it.
- We love you too. - I love you guys too.
(Vander laughs)
- James is really changing the way he acts
and it's really refreshing.
- So after you won Dragula
and took the crown,
what's the biggest thing that's happened for you
because of this?
- It gave me a career where there was none,
I had never had a paid gig, ever.
I had only been doing tip spots
up until that point.
It gave me the opportunity to travel
and just meet really crazy interesting people,
or like young fans, my favorite thing
is the underage fans,
they'll wait outside of the club for you
because they wanna meet you so bad,
and so it's cool to connect those people
and kind of plant seeds of hope
that there is future for the freaks,
and the geeks, and the queerdos,
and the weirdos, y'know?
- With Dragula, where do you see it going?
Like where would you like to see it go
or how would you like this legacy
to be carried on?
- You know what, it's an interesting balance
because there's been so many fabulous shows
that once they go big,
and they have like 20-something producers
and 30-something writers and all this,
it's just too many people,
you lose some of that essence,
some of the soul of the project,
and so for me Dragula, I would love to see Dragula
go massive, but I'm excited to see it go massive
because I know the Boulet Brothers
would never let that happen,
so I'm excited to see it go huge and retain it's essence,
it's horror, it's filth, it's glamor,
and not be a show that's partially censored,
or y'know limited in what it does
because Dragula pushes buttons,
it pushes a lot of people's buttons,
we get it, the people who enjoy the show get it,
and so I'm excited to see it go big
with that audience and y'know, keep that essence.
One last little piece of, I guess advice
if you wanna call it that,
each one of us may have a definition
of what a Supermonster is, I think for me,
a Supermonster is very much someone who has personally
witnessed kinda the nasty of the world,
and the evils of the world,
it's the bullied kids, it's the kids who are left out,
and I think that's why gay people or queer people
as a community tend to have such a connection
to horror films, or to the villains,
because the villains in the horror,
characters were the ostracized, the weird, the ones
who weren't understood, but they took all the things
that made them different,
and turned them into their power
and I think that's where all of this comes from,
and that's why so many people who haven't experienced that
don't get it, they don't get why we love
this darkness, and I think that's just where it comes from,
and I guess I just wanted to share that,
and I can't wait to see what you ladies do
on stage tonight.
- [Victoria] Yes, oh my God, we have to start getting ready!
- I'm gonna pile on four more shawls and scarves.
(all laugh)
Alright, have a great performance ladies
and I'll see you soon! - I'm so nervous!
- Alright, let's hustle.
(eerie music)
- I wasn't paying attention to the time,
so we've really gotta just make sure
everything comes together.
- Aw, fuck dude.
Crap's coming together, and we're about to go on stage.
I'm last (mumbles) Queen, but I'm fucking nervous.
- We are running to get this together,
I don't know if we're gonna get the flags on time,
or if the Bitch is gonna be ready on time,
but we need to go.
- This performance is my (mumbles).
We are really low on time and I don't think
Bitch is ready yet.
(dramatic music)
- I hope this group number goes well.
- This audience looks very tough,
but I feel like we're gonna turn it so hard
and give them something they haven't seen.
- This performance is gonna end their world.
- Guys, now we just need to skull fuck
their craniums into oblivion,
I swear to God.
(dramatic music)
- Let's give 'em a fucking show tonight, guys.
- Failure is not an option. - Let's go!
- Let's party, bitches! - On three, Dragula!
- [All] One, two, three, Dragula!
- So here we're gonna give it up for the Boulet Brothers!
(audience cheers)
(heavy metal music)
- Hello everybody, and welcome to the Race!
- There are some girls from our camp
that came along with us,
they would like to put a show on for you tonight.
- Are you guys ready for a show?
- I am sure that it is gonna blow
your tits clean right off of your chest,
please welcome to the stage the Four Horsewomen
of the Apocalypse. (audience cheers)
(heavy metal music)
(Four Horsewomen scream)
(electronic music) (audience cheers)
♪ I love my car, I love my car
♪ It makes me feel like a super, superstar ♪
♪ It's pink like my sweet, sweet pink lips ♪
♪ Look at yours, look at mine, it's so electrifying ♪
♪ I'll take you on a ride
♪ I'm gonna get it on
♪ So come alive, I'll make you cum before too long ♪
(audience cheering distorts vocals)
♪ Muscle cars, muscle cars, I don't think they heard ♪
(audience cheers)
♪ I wanna shake my ass to the beat ♪
(audience cheers)
♪ It's a mess, it's a mess, all over my dressing gown ♪
♪ Looks on, five feet, what chu here for ♪
♪ I spy my dear, give me more, more, more ♪
♪ More, more, more, more
♪ Give me more, more, more, more, more, more, more ♪
(audience cheers)
♪ Show me what chu got
♪ It makes no sense, but I sweat a lot ♪
♪ 160 miles on the Autobahn
♪ All they want is shell, that is fine, fine, fine ♪
(audience cheers)
♪I love my car, I love my car
♪ It makes me feel like a super, superstar ♪
♪ It's pink like my sweet, sweet pink lips ♪
♪ Look at yours, look at mine, it's so electrifying ♪
♪ I'll take you on a ride, I'mma get it on ♪
♪ So come alive, I'll make you cum before it's done ♪
(audience cheers)
♪ C'mon shake that ass, shake it to the beat ♪
♪ I want you to sing all the words just at my feet ♪
(audience cheers)
♪ Gimme more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more ♪
♪ Gimme more, more, more, more, more, more, more, more ♪
♪ Electrifying, purple reign
♪ I like the spark, all in fact ♪
♪ Come to my rescue, show me what chu got ♪
♪ I know it makes no sense, but I sweat a lot ♪
♪ 160 miles on the Autobahn
♪ All they want is shell, that is fine, fine, fine ♪
(audience cheers)
(audience cheering distorts the lyrics)
♪ I love my car, I love my car
♪ It makes me feel like a super, superstar ♪
♪ It's pink like my sweet, sweet pink lips ♪
♪ Look at yours, look at mine, it's so electrifying ♪
(audience cheers)
♪ Gimme more, more, more, more, more, more, more ♪
(audience cheers)
(explosion)
- [Host] One more time for the Four Horsewomen
of the Apocalypse! (audience cheers)
- You guys did an amazing job. - Thank you so much.
(eerie music)
(dramatic music)
- Well, well, well. - Well, well, well.
It's been a while since we've all been together, huh?
- It's been a minute. - I have to say,
no matter what happens after this,
we have got to keep meting like this.
(all laugh)
- Vander, I have to say,
I am super curious about your opinion
on these four girls
because just to take a moment to tell you,
I really couldn't be more proud of you
as our first Supermonster. - Thank you so much.
- I am so proud of everything that you've done
and the way that you've spent the last year,
it means a lot to me personally.
- Thank you so much,
it's been an absolute honor
to be able to represent Dragula
for an entire year of reign
and I can't wait to crown the next bitch.
- In all honesty too, aside from the fact
that you made an amazing monster,
you've also been on set enough to see these girls
both in front of the camera and behind the camera,
through everything that they've done this season,
I don't think they were really cognizant of the fact
that you would be here,
using all of that information in judging them
and helping us make this decision,
the last elimination of the season.
- So we have four girls left,
and obviously we're gonna pick our final three,
so this is the last extermination of the season.
Give me some of your thoughts
on all of the girls really, who are you favoring?
- So I, over the last couple of weeks,
have been favoring Bitch,
I think she brings such an energy,
she brings such life
to what she does, and I think what's so interesting
about Bitch is that we've seen a journey,
a lot of the other Queens
that we have on the cast this year,
some of them were just amazing right off the bat,
but to see Bitch grow and evolve
and become that insane, crazy performer
that we have now has really been a treat
and I have to go with that.
- She faced a lot of adversary,
and she was able to kind of grow through that
and come out stronger instead of crumble and die,
because I feel like she almost met her end
at the end of episode two.
It was a do or die moment for her.
- I thought for sure that was it,
and I don't know what twist of fate, y'know?
- She got it together! - Yeah she did,
she got it together.
- Y'know all of them wowed me,
one of them just wowed me a little bit less
than the rest and it's because they're all so good
and for me that was unfortunately Aborrah.
I felt like she kind of faded into the background
a little bit this time around,
that's not to say she wasn't phenomenal,
but all of the other girls were amazing.
- Yeah, I think that they all performed
with a really wild, kind of carnal energy
and this place, at Wasteland Weekend,
just being so close to nature and the desert,
and that stage with the flame throwers,
it sort of invokes that kind of energy
and I think all four of them tapped into that,
but I kind of have to agree,
and you know that I have a really weird, strange,
little gnarly place in my heart for Aborrah,
but I have to be honest,
she faded a little where the other three really shined.
- Someone I was really impressed with this week
was Victoria, Victoria always turns out
these amazing, cinematic looks,
but I felt through the competition,
she never sold me what she was presenting on the stage,
I just craved for her to sell me that character,
but tonight that finally fucking happened,
she sold me that character and I felt her fantasy.
- I agree with you, but I take subtleties
into consideration too, it isn't just like who's gonna be
the superstar on stage, I wanna know
about their personality, what excites them?
What in their heart makes them sing?
What gets them excited to be a Queen
and to be Dark Queen and to be a Weird Queen,
and where are there inspirations coming from?
- What did you feel about James?
That was really fucking amazing.
- [Host] It was very Dragula, it was very punk,
and oversexualized and I liked it.
- She was like living it, I enjoyed
everything about it, it's so detail-driven.
Super androgynous, I think everything was kind of there.
She was very careful, and that can also be read
as very calculating, which can also be called very smart,
but I think those are dangerous energies
to be giving out because it's not just truthful
and open and expressive, it's kinda hidden,
and that puts me off.
- You don't wanna find out someone's motive afterwards.
- Secret Bitch Syndrome. - I think that's everyone?
- Yeah. - Yeah.
- It's time to go and read these bitches
for filth, here in the desert.
- And a bitch knows this to be true,
and I know the two of you share this with me,
it's only because we're out in the middle
of the waste that we didn't bring out nails tonight, right?
- True. (all laugh)
- But I think all the talking is done,
it's time we pass judgment.
(eerie music)
(dramatic music)
- I know I speak on behalf of all of us
in saying that your looks tonight are just perfect.
I mean, you went beyond and above
what we expected, all four of you did.
Also your performance as a group was stellar,
I would love to put that on a tour
and let people just see you guys go crazy together.
It was good!
You guys made us proud.
- I think we as a collective group
brought the type of performance
that these people are not really used to seeing,
but we didn't give them any choice.
Yay, we're gonna fucking enjoy it because it all kicked ass.
- (claps) Hell yeah, we nailed the stage show
and the audience lived for it.
- Let's go back to these photos because they were amazing,
and I wanna start with Bitch
because I think your choice for props
is really sweet, and you have to talk to me
about this sword, because when I saw it,
I was just like ah, Bitch brought out the sword.
- I've always wanted to be like a video game vixen,
like that's where my drag comes from,
is like I would play video games as a kid,
coming home from a shitty day at school
and hating life, and I'd go be these awesome women
with these swords and weapons
and you get to be like these heroines
just kicking ass in a body thong.
- I think you perfectly embodied
the body thong, sword-wielding vixen,
like you gave it to me in full fantasy,
and that's something I really love about you,
you're always so electric when you're on stage.
There's something that just draws my eye to you,
and there's an energy that kind of emanates
from within you that's so real,
I can tell that you're having a good time
and you're having fun,
and so I have a good time and I have fun with you.
- Bitch, I was in my fantasy whipping that chain around.
- You're a punk bitch and it's fun to watch.
You know, that's one of the things about Dragula,
everyone's always saying, "Oh, you have to be
"this vampire queen."
I'm like no bitch, it's an alternative drag competition.
Punk drag is a big part of it, as you can see,
and you embody that. - Thank you.
- Yeah, if I had one criticism,
the smoke got to be too much,
because your hair was holding onto a lot of it,
because your hair's so big. (everyone laughs)
(multiple people speak at once)
It was like totally smoke screening you for real,
I was like where the fuck is she, you know?
- Wasteland Weekend was originally Waterworld,
but your dry ass wig soaked up the lake.
(all laugh)
- Bitch!
- Aborrah, I love there's this recurring bird quality
in all of your work,
there's something very like, it's the nose,
the wispy hair, it's the feathers,
and it's something that I've gotten
to very closely associate with you,
where even if I'm walking down the street
and I see a splattered bird I'm like Aborrah!
(all laugh)
And I love that, and your photographs
were very powerful. - Yeah, your photos
were very striking. - The photo
really captured your character I think,
your physicality really came through.
If anyone faded a little bit, it was you.
It wasn't that you were bad,
I just feel like if anything,
maybe they shined just a little bit brighter than you,
my eyes just kinda moved around the stage
and that was just my experience,
and you know I love you bitch,
but it is the truth,
it's what happened (mumbles) performance.
- I feel like, I feel like maybe I didn't push myself
as far as I could have gone.
- You were tighter this week, which is great,
because you know we talked about that last week.
- Hey actually, I think saying,
"We talked about it last week."
Is softening the blow,
you really came for her ass last week.
She learned her lesson. (all laugh)
- My feet are fine, by the way.
- I have to agree, I was very captivated
when you first started.
I felt like yours was like, it was getting there,
it was getting there, but I just didn't quite get
that climax, I know there was a prop,
there was something you like tore
and threw into the crowd,
I couldn't quite tell what it was,
what was that?
- It was moldy bread. - Moldy bread, okay gotcha.
- Because you were famine. - Yes.
- And then I noticed there was like dying bananas
and other like on you, it was really clever,
the little details go along away,
they really do. - For sure.
- I wanted flies to like just naturally--
- Did it work, did it work?
- They didn't want me (laughs)!
- I fucking love you for that, I really do.
- They're too smart for me.
(all laugh)
- James, you super nailed it.
Yeah, you really looked like you were a character
from the movie, like you look fantastic,
but it's also very you
because you had like your crotch out,
your ass out, I always love to see all that
represented because it's on brand for you!
You know your brand and you work it,
but it also doesn't limit you
to change your look to accommodate the styles
that we throw at you. - Yeah, it was high
gender-fuckery, I mean I think you balanced the masculinity
and femineity very well, and I know the details
of your costume were actually functional,
like you saw that it was kinda hot earlier,
and like, "Let me use that working fan."
It was brilliant.
- My favorite part of your costume
was also the tiny little details,
like the Listerine, the salt, and the pepper,
all of those little things
that in a wasteland society are so difficult to acquire,
of course this is what people are using to barter,
this is what they're using as coin,
and I felt like those little details
like really speak to me,
it's very cinematic and I love that.
I loved your performance,
you're very consistent in your performance,
I know that when I watch James,
I'm gonna get an exciting,
like high energy performance.
I loved the jump off the stage,
I wasn't expecting it,
when you came out with your flag,
I don't know if the other girls did it,
but I was looking at you in that moment,
and you thrust the flag into the audience,
and like half of the people were like mortified
because they thought it was like real metal
coming down on them, and after they were like, "Yeah!"
Seeing this metal flag, it gave me life
because you really put the fear of impending doom
upon people, when you first walked out onto the stage,
and I liked that. - It was a lot of fun.
- Okay so Victoria, I mean I think you
are a gifted craftsman from the beginning,
craftswoman if you will,
y'know with all the prosthetics work,
but this is just like costuming on a really high level,
tons of detail, I personally love the repetitive theme
of this kind of like emergency,
which you've brought into your face,
it's really graphic, your knee pads, your shoes,
it was super strong actually, thought it was really butch,
and that was like an interesting way to see you,
because we've seen you with all of this feminine beauty,
so it was nice of you
to surprise us like that. - Thank you.
- I love the rust on your jacket, right?
That's a great detail, it just looks
like it has been out here in this wasteland for years.
- My two favorite things about this look
was the paint job on your face
and the paint job on the shoes
that are coordinating.
I love that, it's so like autobody shop,
industrial military, and the black and the yellow,
and I would never think for someone to paint that
on their face but it actually reads very well
because it angles your eyes upwards,
it kinda pulls your face back.
- [Host] That's another cool wing I've never done before.
- That's a big wing, bitch. - I feel like a cunt bitch
right now. - I will say
when I first saw the look,
I questioned it a little bit because I was thinking,
when I saw it I thought I don't know
if this is Victoria in post-apocalyptic universe,
or if it's Dimitrio in post-apocalyptic universe.
But then you hit the stage,
and you fucking sold the fantasy big time,
I felt it with you, and I believed you!
I believed that you were this character,
you were this person in this wasteland society.
- Awesome, thank you so much.
- So...
(music swells)
James, you won tonight.
(all cheer)
- Oh my God, thank you so much.
Thank God I won,
I was so nervous.
I'm really happy they can see
that I'm trying to really level myself up
and step out of my box in a bold way.
- You earned it, you earned it,
you stood out, your photos were great,
your performance was great,
like I said all of you were doing,
everybody was great, everybody's a winner tonight, honestly.
- [Vander] That's not a line of bullshit,
that's actually true. - That's not bullshit,
I would definitely let you know when you don't win.
(all laugh)
But you guys all did, you all did win tonight,
but you are the winner tonight.
- Thank you so much, this means a lot to me,
I put a lot into this challenge.
- It shows, y'know? - Every single challenge
before this is in my backpack too.
- Interesting, that's a little like witchcraft there,
he's got in that backpack with her.
- In the back of my costume,
there was, I took parts from every challenge
and incorporated it because I felt like
this was the end of the road for Dragula.
If you make this challenge,
you fucking make it to the very top.
- I just wanna say congratulations to you
because I think you delivered the strongest photo today,
and your performance was very strong,
your performances are always really strong,
I like to challenge you to do something that's unexpected,
because the way that I'm feeling about you
is you're a really solid performer,
I think you know you're a solid performer,
you came in a solid performer,
I wanna see a transformation,
I want to be surprised and wowed
by James Matisee.
- Okay, thank you. - Of course, you're welcome.
- I'm proud of you guys as the top four.
I really am, I think you guys have just grown so much
and together, you're a cool team too, y'know?
- We feel really cool.
We feel really cool-- - You should!
What Drag Queens in the world
are cooler than you guys right no?
- Nobody! (all laugh)
- There's really not! - You guys a creative,
you're fearless, you're experimental,
you're supportive of each other,
you definitely have your disagreements,
it's just amazing to take all four of you,
thinking back to where we were,
however many weeks ago it was, and now
bring us out here, into the middle of the waste,
in the middle of the end of the world
and you guys are looking so fucking badass
lik in all honesty, all four of you
should be super proud,
I love our top four girls,
I love my Four Horsewomen of the Apocalypse.
(all cheer)
- It's kind of funny how we've banded together
like these Four Horsewomen
and seen the end of this season,
and I feel so strong standing next to them,
and so unified, this is something
I've never experienced before.
- And since we're talking
about such a nice, heartfelt moment,
I guess it's time to maybe ruin it (laughs).
Bring us back to reality because you know
you've gotta do some motherfucking exterminations tonight.
So tonight all four of you will be facing extermination.
- Normally I would say a family
that slays together stays together, but not tonight.
- Tonight, the extermination is less about paying
your penance or growing from something
you've fucked up in your challenge today.
Tonight's extermination is for the whole season
because some of you
haven't exactly gotten along the whole time.
- Who?
- You had some conflict,
so we've come up with the ultimate way
for you to express your frustrations,
and finally once and for all,
get them out and be done with it.
As you know, when we came in,
we passed giant geodesic dome of death,
well you guys are gonna go in there tonight.
(all scream)
It's called the Thunderdome,
you're gonna be strapped to these bungee cords,
you're gonna be given weapons,
and you're going to fight.
You have to beat the other bitch
better than she beats you,
and you will come out victorious.
We're gonna break you up into two teams
and you're gonna fight
until one of you can't fight anymore.
- Oh my God. - James, you'll be fighting
Victoria tonight, and that means of course--
- Surprise. - The grudge match
of the century, Aborrah versus Bitch.
So let's get to it ladies,
let's kick each other's asses.
(all cheer)
- Can't really get through Dragula
without throiwng at least one punch, right?
(all laugh)
(dramatic music)
- [Host] Alright everybody, let's give it up
for the Thunderdome!
(audience cheers)
Are you ready to see some blood tonight?
Are you ready to see these bitches
bet each other's asses tonight?
(audience cheers)
It's their first time here at Wasteland Weekend,
and these two are most certainly hungry for blood.
Let's do it!
(intense electronic music)
(steel drum echoes)
(battle music)
(dramatic music)
(music swells) These bitches
have been fighting for three fucking months,
now is the time to settle the score, darlings.
(audience cheers)
Two Queens enter, but only one leaves.
Fight!
(music swells)
(intense electronic music)
(battle music)
- The Four Horsewomen of the Apocalypse
fucking came and we brought it,
like this is fucking drag on the next fucking level.
- That was exhilarating,
I never thought in my life
I would ever be doing Thunderdome.
That was the most intense and most fun I've had ever.
- Wow, I am pissed that I lost,
but it was awesome to knock Bitch's face in.
- I chipped my tooth in two places,
I'm fucking pissed about it but like hey, rock 'n' roll!
We're hear to fucking not leave unscathed
in the competition so like I now have Slut Dragula
on my ass and two chipped teth!
- Like holy fucking shit, look at my shoe.
It peeled off and it I punctured the heel.
What the literal fuck?
- This was so cathartic,
and my bananas exploded in my necklace,
so I'm covered in banana jizz (laughs).
- I feel exhilarated today!
This is the most fun I've ever had,
like they put us through the test,
like I feel fucking batshit crazy,
I went crazy, that was like animal,
this monster inside of me
that I've unleashed today.
- I do know that James went ballistic,
and that was awesome (laughs)
to see him lose his mind.
- I don't think I'm going home,
I think Aborrah thinks she's going home,
and I thinK if you think you're going home,
then your time is up.
- It could be me, it could be Bitch.
I think it's gonna come down to the Thunderdome,
and it's probably gonna be me,
but we'll see.
- I have clawed my way to this point,
I think I deserve to be in the top three.
- I think that Bitch should go forward.
Hey. - Hi.
- Hey.
- [Host] That was one hell of a night.
- It sure was. - It was fun
being back in Wasteland Weekend.
- I love it here. - And bringing
some of our Queens with us,
and Vander was fun having him.
- It's like one, big, unhappy family.
- He gave them a lot of good advice.
- I knew he would.
- Alright look, we still have one more thing to do.
- But we're not gonna do it here because the sun
is gonna be up in a few short hours
and we are gonna be far from this desert.
- Fine, we'll do the deed later.
- Let's go.
(eerie music)
(birds chirp)
- Soon, soon everyone will see,
and then it will be mine.
It's so close, I can almost taste it.
What?
No, no, no, no, no, no!
(dramatic music)
(Aborrah screams)
(steel drum echoes)
(bird caws)
- Finally ghouls, are guests of honor have arrived.
It's so fantastic
to have the entire filthy family together again.
- Basically you know all the dirty secrets,
and we want everything laid out on this table.
- [Mask] Why did you lie
and say that I should stay?
- Where I'm from, lying is an easy solution
to solve all your problems.
- What is this incest bullshit?
- I didn't sign up for Dragula
to be a fucking role model.
- No one's above forgiveness,
and if they are, they have no idea
what life is about yet
as far as I'm concerned.
- I mean I'm sorry that your costume came apart,
your costume came apart, and you were boring!
- If we're talking about cheap outfits,
why don't you talk about your runway look
that was from the Walgreen's section for Halloween?
- Put some titties on, bitch.
- I don't wanna talk about that,
and you're interrupting me.
Okay I'm not gonna say it again,
we're not talking about that.
You got it?
Does everybody understand? - I'm guessing
that it's gonna be like any good family reunion,
a messy, emotional, dramatic, train wreck.
(steel drum echoes)
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यस्तो पो हो त funny Video त - Duration: 3:15.
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What Putin Really Wants - Duration: 54:51.What Putin Really Wants
I. The Hack The large, sunny room at Volgograd State University
smelled like its contents: 45 college students, all but one of them male, hunched over keyboards,
whispering and quietly clacking away among empty cans of Juicy energy drink. �It looks
like they�re just picking at their screens, but the battle is intense,� Victor Minin
said as we sat watching them.
Clustered in seven teams from universities across Russia, they were almost halfway into
an eight-hour hacking competition, trying to solve forensic problems that ranged from
identifying a computer virus�s origins to finding secret messages embedded in images.
Minin was there to oversee the competition, called Capture the Flag, which had been put
on by his organization, the Association of Chief Information Security Officers, or ARSIB
in Russian. ARSIB runs Capture the Flag competitions at schools all over Russia, as well as massive,
multiday hackathons in which one team defends its server as another team attacks it. In
April, hundreds of young hackers participated in one of them.
�I�ve been doing cybersecurity since I was 18, since I joined the army in 1982,�
Minin told me after we�d ducked out into the hallway so as not to distract the young
contestants. He wouldn�t say in which part of the army he�d done this work. �At the
time, I signed a gag order,� he told me, smiling slyly. �Do you think anything has
changed? And that I�d say it to a journalist?�
After the army, Minin joined the KGB. And when the Soviet Union collapsed, he went to
work in the Russian government�s cyber and surveillance division. In 2010, after he�d
retired and gone into the private sector, he helped found ARSIB, which has connections
to the Russian defense ministry, the Federal Security Service (FSB), and the interior ministry.
The hacking competitions are Minin�s way of preparing future generations, of �passing
my accumulated knowledge on to the kiddies,� he told me. He said Russian tech firms regularly
come to him to find talent. I asked whether government agencies, like the security services
that conduct cyberoperations abroad, did the same. �It�s possible,� he demurred.
�They also need these specialists.�
When the Capture the Flag competition broke for lunch, Minin and I stepped into the brightness
and the wind outside. The university, a complex of stark white buildings, sits atop a steep
hill with the city and the Volga River below. Once, the river was blood, and the hill was
shrapnel and pillboxes and bones. Once, this was Stalingrad, a city made famous by the
grueling battle fought here in the winter of 1942�43, when more than 1 million men
died before the Germans lost the fight and a field marshal and the momentum of the war.
Today, it is a haunted city.
�Have you been to Mamayev Kurgan yet?,� Minin asked me. He was referring to another
hill, where the battle was so intense, it changed the hill�s shape. Now the Motherland
Calls statue stands there, a 170-foot concrete woman raising a sword to summon her countrymen
into battle. It�s where Nazi Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus was captured, Minin noted
with reverence, and looked into the sunny distance. �You know, it�s important to
see how young people defended their homeland.�
When we got to the cafeteria, I saw that it, too, was haunted by its Soviet past. Grouchy
middle-aged women in hairnets dished out bland, greasy cuisine. If it weren�t for students
tapping at their smartphones, it would have been hard to tell that the 21st century had
ever arrived. I sat down at a table with a team from Astrakhan and told them I had been
to their hometown once, a romantically shabby old city by the Caspian Sea
The students smirked. �Everyone wants to leave,� a third-year named Anton said.
�There�s nothing to do there,� his teammate Sergei added.
Anton was hoping that Minin could help him get his foot in the door at one of the state
security services. �It�s prestigious, they pay well, and the work is interesting,�
he said. If he were accepted, he could hope for a salary of 50,000 rubles (less than $900)
a month, which was almost double the average salary in Astrakhan. Was he motivated by any
feelings of��Patriotic conviction?,� Anton finished my sentence, and started to
chuckle. �No,� he said. �I don�t care what government I work for. If the French
Foreign Legion takes me, I�ll go!�
Isn�t it sacrilege to say such things in a place like Volgograd?, I asked them.
Sergei said the kind of patriotism being fostered in Russia these days was empty, even unhealthy.
He�d been angered by restrictions of online behavior imposed after the prodemocracy protests
of 2011�12, and by government monitoring of online speech, which he called unconstitutional.
�And if you look at the state of our roads and our cities, and how people live in our
city, you want to ask, why are they spending billions of rubles on storing people�s personal
information in massive databases?�
�They�re going to lock you up, Sergei,� a classmate said, stealing a glance at my
phone.
Sergei laughed. �Keep chewing,� he said.
Over the past year, Russian hackers have become the stuff of legend in the United States.
According to U.S. intelligence assessments and media investigations, they were responsible
for breaching the servers of the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee. They spread the information they filched through friendly outlets such
as WikiLeaks, to devastating effect. With President Vladimir Putin�s blessing, they
probed the voting infrastructure of various U.S. states. They quietly bought divisive
ads and organized political events on Facebook, acting as the bellows in America�s raging
culture wars.
But most Russians don�t recognize the Russia portrayed in this story: powerful, organized,
and led by an omniscient, omnipotent leader who is able to both formulate and execute
a complex and highly detailed plot.
Gleb Pavlovsky, a political consultant who helped Putin win his first presidential campaign,
in 2000, and served as a Kremlin adviser until 2011, simply laughed when I asked him about
Putin�s role in Donald Trump�s election. �We did an amazing job in the first decade
of Putin�s rule of creating the illusion that Putin controls everything in Russia,�
he said. �Now it�s just funny� how much Americans attribute to him.
A businessman who is high up in Putin�s United Russia party said over an espresso
at a Moscow caf�: �You�re telling me that everything in Russia works as poorly
as it does, except our hackers? Rosneft��the state-owned oil giant��doesn�t work
well. Our health-care system doesn�t work well. Our education system doesn�t work
well. And here, all of a sudden, are our hackers, and they�re amazing?�
In the same way that Russians overestimate America, seeing it as an all-powerful orchestrator
of global political developments, Americans project their own fears onto Russia, a country
that is a paradox of deftness, might, and profound weakness�unshakably steady, yet
somehow always teetering on the verge of collapse. Like America, it is hostage to its peculiar
history, tormented by its ghosts.
None of these factors obviates the dangers Russia poses; rather, each gives them shape.
Both Putin and his country are aging, declining�but the insecurities of decline present their
own risks to America. The United States intelligence community is unanimous in its assessment not
only that Russians interfered in the U.S. election but that, in the words of former
FBI Director James Comey, �they will be back.� It is a stunning escalation of hostilities
for a troubled country whose elites still have only a tenuous grasp of American politics.
And it is classically Putin, and classically Russian: using daring aggression to mask weakness,
to avenge deep resentments, and, at all costs, to survive.
I�d come to Russia to try to answer two key questions. The more immediate is how the
Kremlin, despite its limitations, pulled off one of the greatest acts of political sabotage
in modern history, turning American democracy against itself. And the more important�for
Americans, anyway�is what might still be in store, and how far an emboldened Vladimir
Putin is prepared to go in order to get what he wants.
�It wasn�t a strategic operation,� says Andrei Soldatov, a Russian journalist with
deep sources in the security services, who writesabout the Kremlin�s use of cybertechnology.
�Given what everyone on the inside has told me,� he says, hacking the U.S. political
system �was a very emotional, tactical decision. People were very upset about the Panama Papers.�
In the spring of 2016, an international consortium of journalists began publishing revelations
from a vast trove of documents belonging to a Panamanian law firm that specialized in
helping its wealthy foreign clients move money, some of it ill-gotten, out of their home countries
and away from the prying eyes of tax collectors. (The firm has denied any wrongdoing.) The
documents revealed that Putin�s old friend Sergei Roldugin, a cellist and the godfather
to Putin�s elder daughter, had his name on funds worth some $2 billion. It was an
implausible fortune for a little-known musician, and the journalists showed that these funds
were likely a piggy bank for Putin�s inner circle. Roldugin has denied any wrongdoing,
but the Kremlin was furious about the revelation. Putin�s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, whose
wife was also implicated, angrily ascribed the reporting to �many former State Department
and CIA employees� and to an effort to �destabilize� Russia ahead of its September 2016 parliamentary
elections.
The argument was cynical, but it revealed a certain logic: The financial privacy of
Russia�s leaders was on par with the sovereignty of Russia�s elections. �The Panama Papers
were a personal slight to Putin,� says John Sipher, a former deputy of the CIA�s Russia
desk. �They think we did it.� Putin�s inner circle, Soldatov says, felt �they
had to respond somehow.� According to Soldatov�s reporting, on April 8, 2016, Putin convened
an urgent meeting of his national-security council; all but two of the eight people there
were veterans of the KGB. Given the secrecy and timing of this meeting, Soldatov believes
it was then that Putin gave the signal to retaliate.
The original aim was to embarrass and damage Hillary Clinton, to sow dissension, and to
show that American democracy is just as corrupt as Russia�s, if not worse. �No one believed
in Trump, not even a little bit,� Soldatov says. �It was a series of tactical operations.
At each moment, the people who were doing this were filled with excitement over how
well it was going, and that success pushed them to go even further.�
�A lot of what they�ve done was very opportunistic,� says Dmitri Alperovitch, the Russian-born
co-founder of the cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike, which first discovered the Russian interference
after the company was hired to investigate the hack of the Democratic National Committee
servers in May 2016. �They cast a wide net without knowing in advance what the benefit
might be.� The Russian hackers were very skilled, Alperovitch says, but �we shouldn�t
try to make them out to be eight feet tall� and able to �elect whomever they want. They
tried in Ukraine, and it didn�t work.� Nor did it work in the French elections of
2017.
Alperovitch and his team saw that there had been two groups of hackers, which they believed
came from two different Russian security agencies. They gave them two different monikers: Fancy
Bear, from military intelligence, and Cozy Bear, from either foreign intelligence or
the FSB. But neither bear seemed at all aware of what the other was doing, or even of the
other�s presence. �We observed the two Russian espionage groups compromise the same
systems and engage separately in the theft of identical credentials,� Alperovitch wrote
on CrowdStrike�s blog at the time. Western intelligence agencies, he noted, almost never
go after the same target without coordinating, �for fear of compromising each other�s
operations.� But �in Russia this is not an uncommon scenario.�
It was almost like one of Minin�s hacking competitions, but with higher stakes. The
hackers are not always guys in military-intelligence uniforms, Soldatov told me; in some cases
they�re mercenary freelancers willing to work for the highest bidder�or cybercriminals
who have been caught and blackmailed into working for the government. (Putin has denied
�state level� involvement in election meddling, but plausible deniability is the
point of working through unofficial hackers.)
American officials noticed the same messy and amorphous behavior as the summer of 2016
wore on. A former staffer in Barack Obama�s administration says that intercepted communications
between FSB and military-intelligence officers revealed arguing and a lack of organization.
�It was ad hoc,� a senior Obama-administration official who saw the intelligence in real
time told me. �They were kind of throwing spaghetti at the wall and seeing what would
stick.�
This chaos was, ironically, one reason the Russians ended up being successful in 2016.
The bickering, opportunism, and lack of cooperation seemed to the Obama administration, at least
initially, like the same old story. A reportpublished in January 2017 by the Office of the Director
of National Intelligence assessing Russian involvement in the election noted that in
2008, a ring of 10 Russian spies, the most famous of whom was the fiery-haired Anna Chapman,
had been in the U.S. in part to monitor the presidential election. But a Department of
Justice complaint from 2010 paints a picture that is more The Pink Panther than The Americans.
The spies, dubbed �The Illegals,� went to think-tank events and summarized press
coverage for Moscow; Chapman registered a burner phone with the address 99 Fake Street.
(Chapman was arrested in 2010, and she and her compatriots were deported in a dramatic
spy exchange.) The Obama administration seemed to be expecting something similar early in
2016. �They�ve nibbled on the edges of our elections� in the past, the former Obama-administration
staffer told me. In 2008, the Illegals �had been trying to cultivate think-tank people
who might go into the administration.� But Russia hadn�t tried �to affect the result
of the election until this time.�
When the Obama administration began to realize, in the summer, that the Russians were up to
something more wide-ranging than what they�d done before, the White House worried about
only half the problem. At that point, the most alarming development was Russian probing
of states� voting systems. The dumps of hacked data and the churn of false stories
about Clinton seemed less troubling, and also harder to combat without looking political.
In September, Obama approached Putin on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, China,
and told him to �cut it out.� That fall, National-Security Adviser Susan Rice hand-delivered
a warning to the Russian ambassador to Washington, Sergey Kislyak. The White House tasked the
Treasury and State Departments with exploring new sanctions against Russia, as well as the
publication of information about Putin�s personal wealth, but decided that such moves
might backfire. If the White House pushed too hard, the Russians might dump even more
stolen documents. Who knew what else they had?
Nevertheless, with just a month to go until the election, the Obama administration took
the extraordinary step of alerting the public. On October 7, 2016, a joint statement from
the Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
said, �The U.S. Intelligence Community is confident that the Russian Government directed
the recent compromises of e-mails� from U.S. political organizations. �These thefts
and disclosures are intended to interfere with the U.S. election process.� ?
The White House expected the media to run with the story, and they did��from 3:30
to 4 p.m.,� Ned Price, a former National Security Council spokesperson under Obama,
said at this summer�s Aspen Security Forum. But at 4 p.m., the statement was overtaken
by a revelation of a different sort: the Access Hollywood tape, in which Trump bragged about
sexually assaulting women. Both the media and the Clinton campaign focused almost exclusively
on the explosive tape, not the intelligence-community statement.
Even if the public notice went unheeded, the Obama administration felt that the Russians
had heard its warnings behind the scenes. According to Soldatov and two former Obama-administration
officials, Moscow seemed to have backed off its probes of U.S. election infrastructure
by October. But the leaks and bogus news stories never stopped. Obama feared that going public
with anything more would look like he was putting his thumb on the scale for Clinton.
And he was sure that she would win anyway�then deal with the Russians once she took office.
The coup de gr�ce, perhaps, was the receipt by the FBI of a dubious document that seemed
to paint the Clinton campaign in a bad light. The Washington Post reported this spring on
a memo, seemingly from Russian intelligence, that had been obtained by an FBI source during
the presidential campaign. The memo claimed that then�Attorney General Loretta Lynch
had communicated with a Clinton campaign staffer, providing assurance that the FBI wouldn�t
pursue the investigation into Clinton�s use of a private email server as secretary
of state too strenuously. Sources close to James Comey told The Post that the document
had �played a major role� in the way Comey, who as FBI director took fierce pride in his
political independence, thought about the case, and had pushed him to make a public
statement about it in July 2016. (He said he would bring no charges, but criticized
Clinton sharply.) Comey�s public comments about the investigation�in July and then
in October�damaged Clinton greatly, possibly costing her the presidency. The document,
the article noted, was a suspected Russian forgery.
A forgery, a couple of groups of hackers, and a drip of well-timed leaks were all it
took to throw American politics into chaos. Whether and to what extent the Trump campaign
was complicit in the Russian efforts is the subject of active inquiries today. Regardless,
Putin pulled off a spectacular geopolitical heist on a shoestring budget�about $200
million, according to former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper. This point is
lost on many Americans: The subversion of the election was as much a product of improvisation
and entropy as it was of long-range vision. What makes Putin effective, what makes him
dangerous, is not strategic brilliance but a tactical flexibility and adaptability�a
willingness to experiment, to disrupt, and to take big risks.
�They do plan,� said a senior Obama-administration official. �They�re not stupid at all.
But the idea that they have this all perfectly planned and that Putin is an amazing chess
player�that�s not quite it. He knows where he wants to end up, he plans the first few
moves, and then he figures out the rest later. People ask if he plays chess or checkers.
It�s neither: He plays blackjack. He has a higher acceptance of risk. Think about it.
The election interference�that was pretty risky, what he did. If Hillary Clinton had
won, there would�ve been hell to pay.�
Even the manner of the Russian attack was risky. The fact that the Russians didn�t
really bother hiding their fingerprints is a testament to the change in Russia�s intent
toward the U.S., Robert Hannigan, a former head of the Government Communications Headquarters,
the British analogue to the National Security Agency, said at the Aspen Forum. �The brazen
recklessness of it � the fact that they don�t seem to care that it�s attributed
to them very publicly, is the biggest change.�
That recklessness nonetheless has clear precursors�both in Putin�s evolving worldview and in his
changing domestic circumstances. For more than a decade, America�s strategic carelessness
with regard to Russia has stoked Putin�s fears of being deposed by the U.S., and pushed
him toward ever higher levels of antagonism. So has his political situation�the need
to take ever larger foreign risks to shore up support at home, as the economy has struggled.
These pressures have not abated; if anything, they have accelerated in recent years.
II. The History When it is snowing, as it was on this spring
afternoon, the gray crags of the Moscow State Institute of International Relations blend
into the low-slung, steely sky. This is where the Soviet state once minted its diplomats
and spies. Here they mastered the nuances of the world before stepping out into it.
Today, the university�s role is much the same, although it has been watered down by
corruption: The wealthy often buy their children admission. I had been invited to listen to
a lecture by one of the institute�s most prominent faculty members, Andranik Migranyan,
who himself graduated from the school in 1972. Migranyan spent much of the past decade in
New York, where he ran the Institute for Democracy and Cooperation, a Russian think tank reported
to have ties to the Russian foreign ministry. Among his old classmates is Sergei Lavrov,
the foreign minister, whom he still counts as a friend.
This afternoon, Migranyan was lecturing on Putin�s speech at the 2007 Munich Conference
on Security Policy, a speech that seems to be Russia�s sole post-Soviet ideological
document�and key to understanding how the relationship between Russia and the U.S. reached
today�s nadir. Putin, still a painfully awkward speaker at the time, was seven years
into his now nearly two-decade reign. Eighteen years prior, in 1989, he had been a KGB officer
stationed in Dresden, East Germany, shoveling sensitive documents into a furnace as protesters
gathered outside and the Berlin Wall crumbled. Not long after that, the Soviet Union was
dead and buried, and the world seemed to have come to a consensus: The Soviet approach to
politics�violent, undemocratic�was wrong, even evil. The Western liberal order was a
better and more moral form of government.
For a while, Putin had tried to find a role for Russia within that Western order. When
Boris Yeltsin, Russia�s first post-Soviet president, named him his successor in 1999,
Russia was waging war against Islamist separatists in Chechnya. On 9/11, Putin was the first
foreign leader to call President George W. Bush, hoping to impress on him that they were
now allies in the struggle against terrorism. He tried to be helpful in Afghanistan. But
in 2003, Bush ignored his objections to the invasion of Iraq, going around the United
Nations Security Council, where Russia has veto power. It was a humiliating reminder
that in the eyes of the West, Russia was irrelevant, that �Russian objections carried no weight,�
as Migranyan told his students. But to Putin, it was something more: Under the guise of
promoting democracy and human rights, Washington had returned to its Cold War�era policy
of deposing and installing foreign leaders. Even the open use of military force was now
fair game.
In 2007, speaking to the representatives and defenders of the Western order, Putin officially
registered his dissent. �Only two decades ago, the world was ideologically and economically
split, and its security was provided by the massive strategic potential of two superpowers,�
Putin declaimed sullenly. But that order had been replaced by a �unipolar world� dominated
only by America. �It is the world of one master, one sovereign.�
A world order controlled by a single country �has nothing in common with democracy,�
he noted pointedly. The current order was both �unacceptable� and ineffective. �Unilateral,
illegitimate action� only created �new human tragedies and centers of conflict.�
He was referring to Iraq, which by that point had descended into sectarian warfare. The
time had come, he said, �to rethink the entire architecture of global security.�
This was the protest of a losing side that wanted to renegotiate the terms of surrender,
16 years after the fact. Nonetheless, Putin has spent the decade since that speech making
sure that the United States can never again unilaterally maneuver without encountering
friction�and, most important, that it can never, ever depose him.
�You should have seen the faces of [John] McCain and [Joe] Lieberman,� a delighted
Migranyan told his students, who appeared to be barely listening. The hawkish American
senators who attended Putin�s speech �were gobsmacked. Russia had been written off! And
Putin committed a mortal sin in Munich: He told the truth.�
The year that followed, Migranyan said, �was the year of deed and action.� Russia went
to war with neighboring Georgia in 2008, a move that Migranyan described as a sort of
comeuppance for NATO, which had expanded to include other former Soviet republics. But
Western encroachment on Russia�s periphery was not the Kremlin�s central grievance.
The U.S., Migranyan complained, had also been meddling directly in Russian politics. American
consultants had engineered painful post-Soviet market reforms, enriching themselves all the
while, and had helped elect the enfeebled and unpopular Yeltsin to a second term in
1996. The U.S. government directly funded both Russian and American nongovernmental
organizations, such as the National Endowment for Democracy, to promote democracy and civil
society in Russia. Some of those same NGOs had ties to the so-called color revolutions,
which toppled governments in former Soviet republics and replaced them with democratic
regimes friendly to the West.
The Rose Revolution in Georgia, the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, the Tulip Revolution
in Kyrgyzstan��Russia looks at this with understandable mistrust,� Migranyan told
his students. He pointed out that the United States, by its own admission, had spent $5
billion in Ukraine to promote democracy�that is, to expand the liberal Western order. Through
this prism, it is not irrational to believe that the U.S. might be coming for Moscow�and
Putin�next. This is why, in 2012, Russia kicked out USAID. It is why Russia banned
the National Endowment for Democracy in 2015, under a new law that shuttered �undesirable�
organizations.
Putin�s Munich doctrine has a corollary: Americans may think they�re promoting democracy,
but they�re really spreading chaos. �Look at what happened in Egypt,� Migranyan said,
beginning a litany of failed American-backed revolutions. In 2011, the Egyptian strongman
Hosni Mubarak stepped down following protests the U.S. had supported, Migranyan contended.
But after �radical Islamists� won power democratically, the U.S. turned a blind eye
to a military coup that deposed the new leaders. Then there was Libya. �You toppled the most
successful government in North Africa,� Migranyan said, looking in my direction. �In
the end, we got a ruined government, a brutally murdered American ambassador, chaos, and Islamic
radicals.�
�If we count all the American failures, maybe it�s time you start listening to Russia?,�
Migranyan said, growing increasingly agitated. �If [Syrian President Bashar al-Assad] has
to go, then who comes in, in place of Assad? � Don�t destroy regimes if you don�t
know what comes after!�
Putin had always been suspicious of democracy promotion, but two moments convinced him that
America was coming for him under its guise. The first was the 2011 NATO intervention in
Libya, which led, ultimately, to the ousting and gruesome lynching of the Libyan dictator,
Muammar Qaddafi. Afterward, many people who interacted with Putin noticed how deeply Qaddafi�s
death troubled him. He is said to have watched the video of the killing over and over. �The
way Qaddafi died made a profound impact on him,� says Jake Sullivan, a former senior
State Department official who met repeatedly with senior Russian officials around that
time. Another former senior Obama-administration official describes Putin as �obsessed�
with Qaddafi�s death. (The official concedes, �I think we did overreach� in Libya.)
The second moment was in November 2013, when young Ukrainians came out onto the Maidan�Independence
Square�in the capital, Kiev, to protest then-President Viktor Yanukovych pulling out
of an economic agreement with the European Union under pressure from Putin. The demonstrators
stayed all winter, until the police opened fire on them, killing some 100 people. The
next day, February 21, 2014, Yanukovych signed a political-reconciliation plan, brokered
by Russia, America, and the EU, but that night he fled the capital. To Putin, it was clear
what had happened: America had toppled his closest ally, in a country he regarded as
an extension of Russia itself. All that money America had spent on prodemocracy NGOs in
Ukraine had paid off. The presence of Victoria Nuland, a State Department assistant secretary,
handing out snacks on the Maidan during the protests, only cemented his worst fears.
�The Maidan shifted a gear,� Ben Rhodes, Obama�s deputy national-security adviser
for strategic communications, told me. �Putin had always been an antagonist, and aggressive.
But he went on offense after the Maidan. The gloves were off, in a way. To Putin, Ukraine
was such a part of Russia that he took it as an assault on him.� (A source close to
the Kremlin confirmed this account.)
Putin and Lavrov were known within the Obama administration for their long tirades, chastising
the American president for all the disrespect shown to Russia since 1991�like the time
in 2014 that Obama listed Russia and Ebola as global threats in the same speech. Yanukovych�s
fall made these tirades far more intense. �For two years afterwards, there wasn�t
a phone call in which [Putin] wouldn�t mention it,� accusing the U.S. of supporting regime
change in Ukraine, Rhodes recalled.
Regime change in Libya and Ukraine led to Russia propping up Bashar al-Assad in Syria.
�Not one more� is how Jon Finer, former Secretary of State John Kerry�s chief of
staff, characterizes Putin�s approach in Syria. It also led inexorably to Russian meddling
in the U.S. election: Russia would show the U.S. that there was more than one regime-change
racket in town.
III. The Player For Russia, a country relentlessly focused
on its history, 2017 was a big year. November marked 100 years since the Bolsheviks, a radical
minority faction of socialists, brought guns into a fledgling parliament and wrested Russia
onto an equally radical path. That bloody experiment itself ended in 1991, with the
collapse of the Soviet Union; December 2016 marked its 25th anniversary. Both anniversaries
were largely ignored by the Kremlin-controlled media, because they are uncomfortable for
Putin. Bolsheviks were revolutionaries and Putin, a statist to his core, loathes revolutions.
But he was also raised to be a person of the Soviet state, to admire its many achievements,
which is why he famously referred to the fall of the Soviet Union as �the greatest geopolitical
catastrophe of the 20th century.�
Putin governs with the twin collapses of 1917 and 1991 at the forefront of his thinking.
He fears for himself when another collapse comes�because collapse always comes, because
it has already come twice in 100 years. He is constantly trying to avoid it. The exiled
oil magnate Mikhail Khodorkovsky has publicly spoken of deposing Putin, and until recently
did not eschew violent means. People like Alexey Navalny, the opposition leader, openly
talk about putting Putin and his closest associates on trial. The Russian opposition gleefully
waits for Putin to fall, to resign, to die. Every misstep, every dip in oil prices, is
to them just another sign of his coming personal apocalypse. The hungry anticipation is mirrored
in the West, especially in the United States.
For the most part, the Kremlin is focused not on any positive development program, but
on staving off that fate�and on taking full advantage of its power before the state�s
inevitable demise. That�s one reason corruption among the ruling elite is so breathtakingly
brazen: A Russian businessman who works with government clients describes the approach
as the �last day of Pompeii,� repeated over and over. Another businessman, who had
just left the highest echelons of a big state-run bank out of frustration at its corruption
and mismanagement, told me, �Russia always rises from the ashes, time and time again.
But I have a feeling that we�re about to go through a time of ashes again.�
Fear of collapse is also why Russian propaganda is intent on highlighting the bloody aftermath
of revolutions the world over. Things may not be great in Russia now�the country has
struggled mightily since 2012�but, the country�s news programs suggest, things can always get
worse. That�s what Russians are told happened in the 1990s, in the nine frenetic years between
the Soviet Union�s collapse and Putin�s ascent to power. �When you have two governmental
collapses in 100 years, people are scared of them,� Migranyan told me. Many Russians
remember the last one personally.
But the number who do is shrinking. One in four Russian men dies before the age of 55.
Putin turned 65 in October, and is surrounded by people who are as old as he is, if not
older. Russia is now �in an autumnal autocracy,� Ekaterina Schulmann, a political scientist
in Moscow, says. �The more it tries to seem young and energetic, the more it obviously
fails.� As Aleksey Chesnakov, a former Kremlin insider, told me, in Russia �the most active
voters��the people who buy in most fully to what Putin�s selling��are the pensioners.�
To Putin�s supporters, his regime isn�t an autocracy, exactly. �It can be described
as demophilia,� Migranyan explained. �It is not a democracy, but it is in the name
of the people, and for the people. Putin�s main constituency is the people. All of his
power comes from his rating with the people, and therefore it�s important that he gives
them the fruits of his rule.� The Kremlin calls it �managed democracy.�
This, too, is crucial to understanding why Putin acts as he does, and how he is likely
to think about new campaigns against the United States. The Kremlin�s direction of the press,
the close eye it keeps on polls and approval numbers, and especially its foreign policy�they
all exist to buttress Putin�s legitimacy, to curry favor with his 144 million subjects.
It�s a complicated, hiccuping feedback loop designed to guarantee that Putin�s authoritarian
rule remains popular and unthreatened.
This is why Putin insists on having elections, even if the result is always predictable.
�Without renewing the mandate, the system can�t survive,� Chesnakov said. �According
to polls, two-thirds of Russians don�t want a monarchy. They want a democracy. But they
have a different sense of it than Americans and Europeans.�
Putin�s third presidential term is up in the spring of 2018. He didn�t bother to
declare that he�d run for reelection until December 6 (the election is in March) and
he likely won�t campaign. This is Putin�s carefully cultivated image at home: the phlegmatic
leader who hovers coolly above the fray as it churns on beneath him. But in the past
year or so, the fray has given him reason to worry.
On a chilly afternoon this spring, I watched college students standing on the steps of
a nondescript building off Volgograd�s central square, waiting to meet with Alexey Navalny.
The opposition leader and anti-corruption crusader has captured the imagination of many
young Russians, as well as that of Westerners who see him as a potential rival of, or even
replacement for, Putin. Navalny has declared that he is running for president in the upcoming
election.
Police had blocked off the street in front of the building, which housed Navalny�s
local campaign office. They stood groggily watching as Cossacks, members of a southern
Russian tribe who have historically acted as the state�s vigilante enforcers, strolled
up and down the block, casually swinging their black-leather whips. Angry-looking young men
in track pants and sneakers�the other fists-for-hire preferred by the Kremlin�paced around the
students, eyeing them menacingly. Young women in vertiginous heels�plainclothes cops�milled
around. Every few minutes, they took out identical camcorders tagged with numbered yellow stickers
and filmed the students standing on the steps, zooming in on their faces.
Navalny had recently been attacked by progovernment thugs who splashed �Brilliant Green,�
a Soviet-era antiseptic, on his face. His supporters subsequently posted an image of
The Motherland Calls, the giant statue commemorating the Soviet victory at Stalingrad, with its
face Photoshopped green, to publicize his rally in Volgograd. The image touched a nerve
in a country where the government fetishizes World War II. Within hours, pro-Kremlin social-media
accounts were using the image to fuel local outrage. By the time Navalny arrived in Volgograd,
from Moscow, the youth wing of Putin�s party was waiting with a protest.
The students standing on the steps of the campaign office found the manufactured outrage
funny. They were at an age when most things were funny, even when the state was clearly
watching them. The FSB had recently sent a summons to the home of Vlad, a fourth-year
student at Volgograd State University who had previously picketed in support of Navalny�s
Progress Party. Roman, a bespectacled third-year student in veterinary science, had been called
into the dean�s office for participating in a protest. �The dean said, �Don�t
go to Navalny�s protests. His political position is wrong,�?� Roman told me, shrugging
and shoving his hands into the pockets of his puffy red jacket.
These young men would soon graduate into an economy that had only recently started to
grow again after a five-year malaise. But the growth is barely perceptible, while prices
for basic goods have soared. Some of their neighbors and family acquaintances hadn�t
been paid in months, they said. �Our parents say things have gotten worse,� Roman told
me. But their parents also knew the potential cost of openly opposing the government, and
weren�t happy that their sons were at the rally that day. They also believed, from watching
state TV, that Navalny was an American agent.
The young men laughed at this, too. Navalny had begun to build his base about a decade
earlier, with a blog on LiveJournal that carefully documented how government officials supposedly
carved thick slices off the state budget and stashed the money in Moscow mansions or real
estate abroad. A few years ago, Navalny launched a YouTube channel where he posts slickly produced
videos describing alleged government corruption schemes. On another YouTube channel, Navalny
Live, he and his team at the Anti-Corruption Foundation host talk shows about politics,
the kind of programming that would never be allowed on state-controlled television. Together,
the channels have more than 1.5 million subscribers, and the videos have collected hundreds of
millions of views.
As the students and I stood chatting, a retinue of preschoolers marched past the office with
their teachers. The college students broke into laughter and cheers. �Everyone says
that Navalny�s supporters are really young, but I didn�t know they were this young!,�
Roman said.
But things quickly lost their comic lightness when a young man in track pants started loudly
arguing with an older Navalny supporter, saying Navalny was funded by the U.S. State Department
and noting the personal offense he took at the green-faced Motherland Calls statue. �It�s
a monument to a great victory!� his friend, another angry young man in track pants, screamed.
�It was built on bones! My grandfather fought for Stalingrad!� (His grandfather, he later
admitted to me, had been born in Georgia in 1941.)
Suddenly, scores of anti-Navalny protesters appeared, some with brooms, as if preparing
to sweep him out of their city. �Navalny, come out!� a middle-aged man with a shaved
head screamed into a megaphone as the protesters surged across the sidewalk toward the campaign
office. �Navalny, come out!� they yelled in response. The college students packed in
tightly on the campaign office�s front steps, ready to defend their leader. The two camps
started pushing and shoving, the crowd swaying violently. The cops watched. I looked up and
saw Roman�s red jacket. He had taken off his glasses and stood on the top step, blinking
and squinting into the noise. The swagger and irony had gone off his face. He looked
vulnerable, like a child.
Navalny emerged at the top of the steps, calm as ever. Part of the crowd started chanting,
�Shame! Shame! Shame!� Navalny invited the man with the megaphone and his comrades
up the steps to talk with him calmly, face-to-face. They came up and grabbed him by the legs and
started to drag him toward the hostile part of the crowd. Finally the cops acted, freeing
Navalny and pushing the crowd back toward the street.
Navalny escaped into his campaign office, where, for the next three hours, he fielded
questions in a room so packed with supporters that his hair was soon dripping with sweat.
He spoke about the contrast between government elites� luxurious lifestyles and the region�s
sagging wages; about rising utility fees, despite falling energy prices; about the pitiful
state of the roads.
�Alexey!� one of his supporters yelled out. �There�s nothing left in our city
since 1945 except the victory!� Everyone clapped
Navalny laughed at the state�s accusations that his supporters�the hundreds of people
sweating with him in the room�had been paid by the U.S. State Department to show up. �This
is the real political force of the country,� he said. �And we will win. We are destined
for victory, because in any culture, in any civilization, people like us win, because
they lie and we tell the truth.�
I wiped clear a small rectangle on a fogged-up window. There was nothing left of the angry
crowd, not even the police. They had vanished as quickly as they had materialized.
Two days later, on March 26, Navalny rushed back to Moscow, where thousands of people
had heeded his call to come out and protest state corruption. Tens of thousands more came
out in nearly 100 other Russian cities and towns, across Russia�s 11 time zones�an
unexpected showing that grabbed international headlines. Earlier that month, Navalny had
posted an hour-long expos� on YouTube about the extensive luxury-real-estate holdings
of the prime minister and former president, Dmitry Medvedev�who in 2008 had lamented
that a sum equivalent to a third of the Russian federal budget had disappeared to corruption.
Navalny contrasted the opulence of Medvedev�s many homes, filmed by drones, with his awkward
call for austerity to the residents of Crimea, who, on joining Russia, had lost access to
a steady supply of water, electricity, and reasonably priced food. �There�s no money,�
Medvedev advised them two years after the annexation, in 2016, �but you hang in there.�
By the time of the mass protests, the expos� had been watched almost 12 million times.
A couple of schoolboys climbed up on a lamppost in Moscow�s iconic Pushkin Square, packed
with protesters, and called to the cops trying to get them down, �There�s no money, but
we�re hanging in there!�
In recent years, as the economy has struggled, Putin has purchased his popularity with a
series of tactical measures. Putin pays extremely close attention to his approval ratings to
see what works and what doesn�t. He and his advisers are addicted to polls. According
to Alexander Oslon, who runs the Public Opinion Foundation, which does polling for the Kremlin,
�They can�t live without them.�
Putin�s approval rating surged in 2014 with the annexation of Crimea�and, by extension,
Russia�s return to imperial grandeur. It was a risky maneuver, the equal, perhaps,
of Putin�s later interference in the U.S. election. And it paid off, at least in the
short term. Russians rallied behind the Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine�and behind
Putin, their audacious president. �There was a spike in loyalty� toward �every
organ of the state,� Kirill Rogov, a political analyst in Moscow who studies Russian polling,
told me��a conservative shift in all directions. People started paying more attention to the
news, they watched more TV, and they became more indoctrinated.� For a decade, a majority
of Russians had told pollsters that they would rather be well-off than live in a great power.
In 2014, those preferences flipped.
But the rush of patriotism provided by the Crimean annexation proved fleeting. Connected
by land only to Ukraine, Crimea is hard to supply from Russia. The peninsula is facing
severe water shortages in its near future, and tourism, a mainstay of the local economy,
has plummeted. On a recent trip there, I was told by even the most ardently pro-Russia
locals, Cossacks who had staged protests supporting Moscow in 2014, that they had come to regret
their stance. The violent lawlessness and corruption of Moscow had reached their home,
and life had become much harder as Russian citizens. In some ways, they missed being
Ukrainian.
Meanwhile, the already sluggish Russian economy has lost cheap Western financing, following
the imposition of American and European sanctions. Putin�s response to those sanctions�banning
food imports from the United States and the EU�made food prices climb by double-digit
percentages. The economy sank into recession. By the beginning of 2017, the government�s
approval numbers had nearly returned to pre-annexation levels.
Russia�s intervention in Syria, which began in the fall of 2015, offered another flag-wrapped
distraction. As America shrank from its traditional role in the Middle East, Russia expanded its
own, making an ostentatious show of fighting Islamist terrorists on behalf of a reluctant
Western Christendom. Shortly after the Syrian army, aided by Russian airpower and commandos,
retook the ancient city of Palmyra from the Islamic State, the Russian military flew the
Mariinsky Orchestra in from St. Petersburg for a concert in front of the city�s historic
ruins�and a dozen press cameras. (Russian TV barely covered the loss of the city by
Russian-backed forces to ISIS half a year later.)
There will inevitably be a reckoning for the Syrian adventure, too. For the entirety of
his reign, Putin has struggled to contain an Islamist insurgency in Russia�s North
Caucasus mountains, from which terrorists have launched attacks on Moscow. But on a
trip this spring to Dagestan, a mostly Muslim enclave in the heart of the mountains, I found
that the region, once extremely violent, was peaceful. Worried about potential terror attacks
in nearby Sochi during the 2014 Olympics, the Russian secret services had allowed hundreds,
if not thousands, of Islamist rebels, all of them Russian citizens, to go to Syria.
According to one report in Novaya Gazeta, the FSB even provided some of them with a
passport and transportation to the Russian border.
It was a shortsighted counterterrorism strategy. Two Dagestani men who traveled to ISIS-controlled
territories in Syria in order to bring back their children told me that they heard as
much Russian as Arabic on the streets of ISIS cities. An October report by the Soufan Center,
a security-intelligence nonprofit, showed that more foreign fighters in Iraq and Syria
came from Russia than from any other country. What will become of these Russian fighters,
now better trained and battle-hardened, as ISIS territory continues to shrink? Some 400
have already returned to Russia, according to the Soufan Center report, but even those
who don�t return home can wreak havoc: In April, a suicide bomber blew himself up at
a St. Petersburg metro station, killing 13 people. Russian speakers outside the country
who had joined ISIS were suspected of having radicalized him.
Russia�s interference in the U.S. election was just as shortsighted. At first, Donald
Trump�s victory seemed to be a great coup for Putin. Kremlin loyalists celebrated Trump�s
inauguration in Moscow, including at a live watch party with free-flowing champagne. And
it conferred on Russia prestige of a sort. When I asked Victor Minin, the former Russian-government
cybersecurity specialist who runs hackathons across Russia, about the effect of American
media coverage of Russian hackers, he said, �It�s the brand of the year. It�s a
good thing when, aside from oil, we have cutting-edge specialists and the whole world is talking
about them.�
But this victory has burned out even faster than the others. The fingerprints that the
Russians left behind, once discovered, raised an uproar in Washington. Congress, in a rare
near-unanimous vote, stripped Trump of the ability to unilaterally lift American sanctions
on Russia. They will very likely remain in place indefinitely, a prospect Medvedev bemoaned
in a Facebook post the day Trump reluctantly signed the bill into law. Unable to get back
the two diplomatic compounds in the U.S. that had been seized during the last days of the
Obama administration, the Russians plunged headfirst into a destructive tit for tat�which
resulted in the seizure of three more Russian diplomatic posts.
Ironically, one of the Russian institutions to suffer the most blowback for the Russian
hack is the FSB, one of the agencies believed to be behind the 2016 interference. �Before
2016, the FSB had a good reputation in Washington,� Andrei Soldatov, the Russian journalist, told
me. The head of the FSB �was considered a reliable partner in fighting terrorism.�
But �it all ended in 2016, and it ended very badly.� FSB officers were put on the
FBI�s most-wanted list for cybercriminals, an unprecedented retaliation. The head of
the FSB�s elite cyber unit and his deputy were forced out; two other top officers from
the unit ended up in Moscow�s most notorious jail. �They�re now under incredible pressure
both from the inside and the outside,� Soldatov said. �Sometimes,� says Michael Hayden,
a director of the National Security Agency under George W. Bush, �you have successful
covert operations that you wish hadn�t succeeded.�
Meddling in the U.S. election might have destabilized the American political system, but it is unclear
how carefully Putin considered the potential consequences for his country. His goal is
to stay in power another day, another year, and to deal with complications when�and
if�they arise.
The protests sparked by Navalny, are a complication that has, for now, been dealt with. Police
arrested 1,043 people on March 26 in Moscow alone. On October 7, following another, smaller
round of protests, they arrested hundreds more. Navalny will not be allowed on the election
ballot, according to various reports and one Kremlin insider I spoke with; a recent court
finding against him following trumped-up charges of embezzlement will most likely be used to
disqualify him.
These were hardly the first protests that Putin has weathered. Massive prodemocracy,
anti-Putin demonstrations rocked Moscow in the winter of 2011�12�and were followed
by a violent police crackdown on May 6, 2012, the day before Putin was sworn in for a third
time. Dozens of people, some of them first-time protesters, were given multiyear prison sentences.
The Kremlin soon raised the penalties for participating in any kind of unsanctioned
protest. Several people are now in jail simply for sharing or liking posts on social media.
Olga Romanova, who founded the NGO Russia Behind Bars to provide Russians with legal
assistance, told me that the lesson the government is preparing for this new batch of young protesters
�will be bigger and harsher� than the one in 2012, and that �it will last years.�
She said the state was threatening to separate protesting minors from their parents. The
feared Investigative Committee �is calling in school principals, school psychologists,
teachers for questioning,� Romanova said. �And they testify against the kids.� (This
summer, under pressure from the Russian government, Romanova fled to Western Europe.)
Having declared his candidacy, Putin will almost certainly win another six-year term.
Instead of Navalny, the television celebrity Ksenia Sobchak, a daughter of the man who
helped launch Putin�s political career, will run against him�acting, it is commonly
believed, as a Kremlin-approved steam valve for the liberal opposition. The oligarch Mikhail
Prokhorov, the majority owner of the Brooklyn Nets, is thought to have played this role
in 2012. (Both Sobchak and Prokhorov have denied any Kremlin involvement in their campaigns.)
In reality, Putin will run essentially unopposed. Other dummy candidates will likely include
old men from the �loyal opposition� parties that are on the Kremlin�s payroll. Protests
notwithstanding, Putin is still broadly popular, especially among older Russians, and the election,
in any case, will be engineered to deliver the right result.
In 2012, when Putin ran for his third term amid protests, the Kremlin put out the message
that the system had to deliver at least 50 percent of the vote to Putin to prevent an
embarrassing runoff. But as that target moved down through the giant Russian bureaucracy,
each layer added a little extra padding, to avoid the wrath of supervisors. The electoral
machinery employed various tricks�manipulating voter rolls, stuffing ballot boxes, driving
busloads of supporters around to vote at multiple precincts. All the padding added up. On election
night, Putin stood on a stage with the Kremlin behind him and tears gleaming on his cheeks:
The people had resisted the Western-backed protesters and delivered him a resounding
win�64 percent of the vote.
But the margin of that win must now be exceeded, and given that election fraud was the issue
that initially catalyzed the protests in 2011�12, the Kremlin has been trying to perform a tricky
balancing act: delivering the right result while making the election look fair. On Christmas
Eve 2016, at a gathering of deputy governors in Moscow, the Kremlin laid out its election
strategy for 2018, which it called �70/70.� The goal was a 70 percent turnout, with 70
percent of the vote to Putin. Without overt fraud, those are very hard targets to hit.
So the Kremlin is said to be looking for the next ratings bump��a rally-around-the-flag
effect,� said Kirill Rogov, the political analyst, �like the surge in Bush�s popularity
after 9/11, when, in a moment of national crisis or success, the opposition tamps down
its criticism because it just won�t resonate with the population.� In most countries,
this wave passes and the criticism reemerges. �But in Russia,� Rogov said, �the rally
around the flag never stops.�
IV. Double Down On April 10, 2017, an assistant to Adam Schiff,
the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, which is investigating Donald Trump�s
campaign for possible collusion with the Kremlin, patched in a long-planned call from Andriy
Parubiy, the speaker of the Rada, the Ukrainian parliament. Parubiy said he had some potentially
explosive information about Trump�s visit to Moscow for the Miss Universe pageant in
2013.
�I would just caution that our Russian friends may be listening to the conversation, so I
wouldn�t share anything over the phone that you don�t want them to hear,� Schiff warned.
But Parubiy persisted. �In November 2013, Mr. Trump visited Moscow, he visited competition
Miss Universe, and there he met with Russian journalist and celebrity Ksenia Sobchak,�
he said in his heavily accented, awkward English. He explained that in addition to having ties
to Putin, Sobchak is �also known as a person who provides girls for escort for oligarchs.
And she met with Trump and she brought him one Russian girl, celebrity Olga Buzova.�
Schiff soberly asked for clarification, and Parubiy answered directly: Sobchak, he said,
is a �special agent of Russian secret service.�
Buzova �got compromising materials on Trump after their short relations,� Parubiy said.
�There were pictures of naked Trump.�
Schiff betrayed no emotion. �And so Putin was made aware of the availability of the
compromising material?� he asked.
�Yes, of course,� Parubiy said. Putin wanted it communicated to Trump that �all
those compromising materials will never be released if Trump will cancel all Russian
sanctions.� The biggest bombshell: He had obtained a recording of Buzova and Sobchak
talking about the kompromat while the two were visiting Ukraine. He told Schiff, �We
are ready to provide [those materials] to FBI.�
Parubiy had more to say. He told Schiff about meetings that Trump�s former national-security
adviser, Michael Flynn, had had with a Russian pop singer who served as an intermediary for
the Kremlin. They�d met at a caf� in Brighton Beach, a Russian-immigrant enclave in Brooklyn,
where, Parubiy said, �they used a special password before their meetings.� One would
say, �Weather is good on Deribasovskaya.� The right response was �It rains again on
Brighton Beach.�
�All righty. Good, this is very helpful. I appreciate it,� Schiff said. He told Parubiy
that the U.S. would welcome the chance to review the evidence he had described. �We
will try to work with the FBI to figure out, along with your staff, how we can obtain copies.�
Schiff was right to be concerned about �our Russian friends� listening in, though not
in the way he imagined. It wasn�t Parubiy who�d called. It was Vladimir Kuznetsov
and Alexey Stolyarov, two Russian pranksters known as Vovan and Lexus. There was no kompromat,
no meetings between Flynn and a Russian pop star in Brighton Beach. The call made the
Americans look gullible, which suited the callers. Kuznetsov and Stolyarov immediately
sent the recording to Kremlin-friendly media, which gleefully made hay of it: another dumb
American, ready to believe the most-ludicrous stories about a Russia run by sneaky, evil
spies. Any Russian listening to the tape would have instantly recognized how silly the conversation
was. There were the B-list Russian celebrities, plus other cultural signals, like the code
phrase Flynn allegedly used, which is actually the title of a classic Russian comedy.
�We wanted to talk to someone who specifically works on intelligence and give him a completely
insane version of events,� Kuznetsov told me of the prank.
�We leaked him a bunch of disinformation,� Stolyarov said. �It was completely absurd.�
(A spokesman for Schiff said, �Before agreeing to take the call, and immediately following
it, the committee informed appropriate law-enforcement and security personnel of the conversation,
and of our belief that it was probably bogus.�)
Kuznetsov and Stolyarov come off as the Jerky Boys of Russia, but they are more than that.
We met at a Belgian pub in one of Moscow�s bedroom communities. Kuznetsov, 31, wore a
white shirt flecked with black skulls, and Stolyarov, 29, a gray hoodie with Putin�s
face superimposed on a map of Russia. (�I see Putin positively,� Stolyarov said. �I
can�t think of anything major I�d disagree with him on,� Kuznetsov concurred.) When
the duo met, in 2014, they started pranking Russian celebrities, but quickly tired of
it. �It�s more interesting talking to people who decide people�s fates,� Kuznetsov
said
He and Stolyarov have repeatedly denied any connection to the Russian secret services,
but they clearly have cozy ties to the government. They have had shows on several Kremlin-controlled
TV channels, which requires high-level approval. When I met them, they casually mentioned that
they had been at the Russian Parliament the day before, meeting with a well-known elected
official. �We�re working on a project,� Stolyarov said coyly, then bragged about having
hacked the Skype account of the late Russian oligarch�and Putin enemy�Boris Berezovsky
�for a long time.� They had somehow obtained the cellphone numbers of foreign leaders such
as Turkey�s Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Kuznetsov and Stolyarov have an extensive list of American victims. In February, posing
as the Ukrainian prime minister, they prank-called Senator John McCain, who confessed that the
Trump era was the hardest time of his long political life. �He sounded like he didn�t
know what to do�like, at all,� Kuznetsov recalled. That same month, they prank-called
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who told them that new sanctions against Russia
were unlikely.
The point of Kuznetsov and Stolyarov�s American work is both to uncover important information�like
what will happen regarding sanctions�and to troll, distract, confuse, and ridicule
people whom American voters might be inclined to respect but who are hostile to Russia.
They play on what they see as American na�vet�. �This would never happen in Russia,� Stolyarov
said. �People wouldn�t be so trusting, especially if they are a member of parliament
or a civil servant.� They�d like to prank Hollywood actors, Kuznetsov added, but they
are �much harder to reach than American senators.�
If one were to design avatars of Russia�s approach to undermining the U.S.�opportunistic,
oblique, clownish, and shockingly effective�it would be hard to do better than Vovan and
Lexus. They and the future hackers trained by Minin are all small pieces of a shifting,
multipronged covert-influence campaign against Western politicians, systems, and values�a
campaign built more on the premise of trial and error than on grand strategy. The Russians
have �1,000 ways to attack,� a former U.S. intelligence official told me. �They
don�t need all of them to get through. Just a few are enough.�
Where the Russians have broken through, the apertures they�ve exploited seem glaring
in retrospect. �I have been impressed over the last five weeks by how fragile our democracy
is,� Schiff told me not long before he was prank-called, as we sat in a cafeteria booth
in the basement of the Capitol. What Russia showed in the 2016 election�and what it
has continued to show in the election�s aftermath�is not so much its own strength,
but American vulnerability: that it doesn�t take much to turn the American system on itself.
�Covert-influence operations don�t create divisions on the ground; they amplify them,�
says Michael Hayden, the former NSA chief. John Sipher, the former CIA operative, agrees.
�If there�s anyone to blame, it�s us,� he says. �If we accept the stoking, it�s
our fault.�
As Americans are left trying to puzzle out what exactly happened in 2016, and how they
fell prey to what Hayden has called �one of the most successful covert-influence campaigns
in history,� the campaign continues. Putin, ever the gambler, will continue to seize opportunities
as they arise, and bend them to his immediate advantage. Given what�s already been revealed�and
the extent to which Congress has tied Trump�s hands on sanctions�he knows that he�ll
see no immediate benefit from playing nice. Without meaningful new deterrence, he will
continue lashing out as both he and his country age and decline.
Some Americans, including the current president, believe that if only we could identify where
our interests align, Russia could be a good partner. But those who have dealt with Putin
for decades understand that this is, at best, a fantasy. �Putin defines Russia�s interests
in opposition to�and with the objective of thwarting�Western policy,� Ash Carter,
Obama�s last defense secretary, told me recently. �It�s very hard to build a bridge
to that motivation. It makes it ipso facto impossible� to �work cooperatively with
Russia.�
Putin is not a supervillain. He is not invincible, or unstoppable. He pushes only until the moment
he meets resistance. His 2014 plans to lop off the eastern third of Ukraine, for instance,
broke apart against the surprisingly fierce resistance of the Ukrainian army, and Western
sanctions. Obama sanctioned the Russian government for its election interference during his last
days in office, closing those Russian compounds and expelling some diplomats, but it was a
belated, feeble response. More-forceful options�revealing intelligence that would embarrass Putin, or
introducing truly crippling new sanctions�Obama decided not to use.
The current presidential administration, meanwhile, is uninterested in punishing Russia. And the
various investigations into Russian election meddling, along with the press�s attention
to them, are mostly focused on what happened in 2016, rather than on what Russia will inevitably
do in the 2018 and 2020 elections if it is not penalized and credibly warned off future
intervention. American counterintelligence forces sit idle, waiting for a directive to
do battle with the Russians that insiders suspect will never come.
Putin set out to show that there is nothing special about America, that it is just another
country. Whether he is right depends in no small part on whether enough Americans�especially
powerful or politically connected Americans�still believe their system is worth defending.
There is one dot on the horizon that particularly worries the Kremlin. In 2024, Putin�s next
six-year presidential term will be up. The constitution limits Putin to two consecutive
terms, and he will be 71 years old. �All these guys are thinking about 2024,� said
the businessman high up in United Russia, Putin�s party. The parliament could change
the constitution to allow Putin to serve yet another term. But that�s not ideal. Putin,
who trained as a lawyer before he was a KGB agent, has insisted on maintaining a simulacrum
of legality. And anyway, he, a mortal man, can serve only so many terms.
So what is Putin to do? Will he hand off his throne to a successor? There are ever fewer
candidates. His circle of advisers has shrunk; now it�s made up mostly of old men who,
like him, came from Leningrad or served in the KGB. In recent years, he has replaced
regional governors with young loyalists and even former bodyguards�most of whom have
no significant governing experience but owe everything to him. More and more, he appears
to be a man without an exit strategy. As one Putin ally told me in 2013, �We don�t
have this tradition of, okay, you served two terms and you leave. We have no other tradition
but to hold out to the end and leave feetfirst��that is, in a coffin.
In 2014, Vyacheslav Volodin, now the speaker of the Russian Parliament, said, �If there
is Putin, there is Russia. If there is no Putin, there is no Russia.� Putin has personalized
the institutions of the state�the courts, the army, the security forces, the parliament,
even the opposition parties�and the economy, too. As the economic pie gets smaller, the
elites are cannibalizing one another in the struggle over whatever resources remain, and
can be squeezed out of the population. The people now filling Russia�s most notorious
jails are elite government officials: countless bureaucrats, at least four governors, and
numerous mayors. A minister is under house arrest. They are the losers in an increasingly
savage fight. The winners are typically those who spin in the orbit closest to Putin�s
dying star.
Ironically, Putin has laid the groundwork for exactly the kind of chaotic collapse that
he has spent his political life trying to avoid, the kind of collapse that gave rise
to his reign. He has made himself a hostage to a system he built with his own hands. �The
lack of alternatives worries everyone, including Putin,� Andranik Migranyan said. He said
that in 2012, Putin told him, �I often have to spend time on ruchnoe upravlenie��Russian
for a car�s manual transmission and a term that has come to signify micromanagement.
�I would love to leave if I felt like I did enough work to make institutions work
independently of the next leader.�
But of course, the longer Putin spends using the stick shift, the less likely the gears
will catch on their own, without his strong hand to guide them into place. �It�s the
dictator�s dilemma,� says one of Washington�s veteran Russia-watchers. �The only way to
take away risk is you can�t leave. And you can�t reform, because that leads to cracks
in the system that lead to your overthrow.�
Putin has been kicking the can down the road for a long time, and this has generally worked
for him. He is still popular and still in good shape, as his shows of bare-chested masculinity
are meant to remind us. But there is less road left every day, and one day, it will
run out. Everyone in Moscow knows that day is coming, but no one knows what happens the
day after. �If he suddenly leaves in 2024, we will be orphaned,� says Konstantin Malofeev,
an oligarch who was sanctioned by the West for supporting pro-Russian rebels in Ukraine
(which he has denied doing). He believes that Putin was chosen by God to lead Russia. The
next person, he fears, won�t have the same sense of duty. �The next person,� he says,
�will be worse.�
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Nigerian Singer, Simi Teaches Retired Footballer Thierry Henry To Sing In Yoruba|NVS News - Duration: 2:29.Nigerian Singer, Simi Teaches Retired Footballer Thierry Henry To Sing In Yoruba
Nigerian Singer, Simi Teaches Retired Footballer Thierry Henry To Sing In Yoruba (Video).
When talents meet something exceptional is created.
Talented Nigerian singer Simi has been spotted at an event teaching talented retired football player Thierry Henry how to speak Yoruba.
The retired football player who was unveiled as the ambassador for the Guinness 'Made of Black' campaign at an event held in Victoria Island, Lagos sang one of Simi's songs in Yoruba.
In a video that has gone viral on social media, the singer was seen asking the football legend to recite a line in one of her songs.
The line "Mo'ooo sho'oooo rire ooooo" is translated to "I am blessed".
Like everything Henry does, he put effort and determination into the line and passed with flying colours.
He was later told by the singer to sing the line and he did that in flying colours like a piece of cake.
Henry who was born on August 17, 1977, is a retired French football player.
He played as forward for Monaco, Juventus, Barcelona, New York Red Bulls.
He spent eight years at Arsenal where he is the recorded as the clubs all-time goal scorer.
The football legend is the second assistant manager of the Belgium national team.
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Yoga challenge with my pretty sister - 2018 | Yoga challenges Videos - Duration: 9:52.Yoga challenge with my pretty sister - 2018 | Yoga challenges Videos
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Wine of the Week: Chamfleur Blue Wine (Episode 38) - Duration: 16:41.Hi Titas! Merry Christmas!
Happy holidays. Happy whatever.
Let's continue. We are here with our new Tito.
You can call me whatever you want. You can even call me an animal. It's okay!
I'm really flattered.
Please introduce yourself.
I'm a photographer who uses an iPhone.
I'm good!
Praise me!
Yes!
I won in competitions.
I look dumb.
What?!
But thank God, I'm talented.
So guys, follow Tito Kristian.
Yes. I hope you can spell Brooklyn.
We are featuring something very new. A new world wine.
Can you spell it?
You know chamfluer, the one you put on your hair when you take a shower.
It's so easy to spell.
Have you tried it?
Never.
Can you pronounce it again?
Chamfleur.
That's how it's pronounced. Chamfleur.
You're so good!
For people who don't know how to drink wine, what's the first step?
You swirl it.
After swirling it, you smell.
It has a weird smell.
It's smells like a farmer. Those who plant
Fertilizers?
Wines are from grapes right?
Yeah.
How did it turn blue?
The color came from the skin of the grape.
Is this inexpensive? Expensive?
This is how much?
It's around 950-980 pesos
Around that range.
For context, is it expensive?
Since it's very rare, it's not that expensive.
It's not expensive, here in the Philippines.
Very few establishments have blue wine. They're usually imported from Spain or wherever available.
Let's taste it first.
Cheers!
I love you guys! Even if it's our first time to meet.
I love you too!
You can go to my wake.
Cheers!
How do you taste?
Just drink it.
It's good!
It's similar to Listerine in color but doesn't taste like Listerine.
Yeah.
The color reminds me of Bubblegum Lambanog.
Yeah!
Such a traveler!
How about you? What does it remind you of, Toni?
Gatorade.
Yeah, you're right.
This reminds me of my first love.
Cold.
Cool and cold.
It's a sparkling wine so it has to be cold.
Where do you buy this?
You can buy it from Planet Grapes.
Where is that?
At Shangri-la Plaza in Edsa.
And at Shangri-la, The Fort.
You need to call them first to reserve a bottle.
It gets sold out immediately.
When do you drink this? Which cinematic moment?
Celebrations.
What would you celebrate when you drink this? When your enemy dies?
Possible.
You? When would you drink this?
It's perfect for Christmas!
But it's blue.
I'd probably choose New Years.
Maybe I'll drink this if Zara has a huge sale.
I'll open a bottle!
I can now fit in a Zara.
How do you describe the taste of wine?
So I won't be embarrassed during Christmas.
It depends on the wine.
This one is very light for me.
The taste is very fruity.
Not citrusy but sweet.
It's not that sour.
It's semi sweet.
It's sweet and sour at the same time.
I use very simple words when describing the taste.
Sweet, sour.
You don't talk about notes?
None of that!
Maybe he's looking for certain wine characteristics like tannins.
This wine is very low on tannins, and high in acidity.
I'm not that technical with my descriptions.
Low on tannins, high in acidity.
You can refer to tannins as the bitterness of the wine.
Yes, it's low.
Acidity is the characteristic that would make you salivate.
Yes, after drinking the wine.
If it makes you salivate, then it's acidic.
Are you?
Right?
You said this is high in acidity.
Yes.
You're right!
How about you? What do you taste?
It's slightly sweet, and somewhat sour as well.
I didn't get a lot of the acidity, but I felt a lot of fizz.
I think this is the best wine I've ever had.
Really?
I used to hate wine because it makes me feel dry.
Those are the ones with high tannins.
But I heard that wines with high tannins are the healthiest.
Let's toast for Christmas!
Yes, let's toast for the holidays.
Merry Christmas!
Do we have love for Christmas?
If that's what is preferred, okay.
You know, Toni?
What?
You're sexy to me.
Actually.
But our relationship is clear, right?
Yes!
But you seem to have a sex appeal lately.
Is it the wine?
Yes.
It's probably the wine.
Question, will this make me drunk?
Can the colors of the wine indicate
if I will get drunk or not?
No, it depends on the alcohol content.
Yes.
So just because it's red, doesn't mean that it has more alcohol?
Yeah.
Do they measure the alcohol content like they do with beer?
They do, right?
Beer is usually around 5% ABV.
Yes, it's usually around 5-8% ABV.
Depends on the beer.
And with wine, what it the average figure?
11-12% ABV.
That's high!
Tequila is higher.
Let's check the percentage of this one.
I think it's pretty low.
But let's try to pair this wine with food.
It is said that this wine is best paired with Asian food,
and sweets as well. Since it's a semi-sweet wine.
So we are trying it with two dishes.
Very Christmas and very Filipino.
In fairness, wine and steamed rice cake?
Let's try.
Let's try it!
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Body of Mashpee man found in Plymouth - Duration: 1:34. For more infomation >> Body of Mashpee man found in Plymouth - Duration: 1:34.-------------------------------------------
Til Ladoo Recipe | Til Gud Ladoo Recipe | Tilkut Recipe | Makar Sankranti Recipe - Duration: 3:38. For more infomation >> Til Ladoo Recipe | Til Gud Ladoo Recipe | Tilkut Recipe | Makar Sankranti Recipe - Duration: 3:38.-------------------------------------------
How To Help Organize For Justice Democrats - Duration: 4:14.>>WE HAVE A FUN SLOGAN FOR YOU GUYS, GET OFF THE SOFA, FIGHT
FOR WOFA.
OF COURSE YOU ARE GOING TO ASK ME WHAT THE HELL IS
WOFA?
YEAH, WE RECENTLY MADE IT UP.
IT'S SHORT FOR WEEKEND OF
ACTION.
ISN'T THAT FUN?
WHAT ARE YOU DOING, AND WHAT IS THE
ACTION ALL ABOUT?
JUSTICE DEMOCRATS YOU KNOW ARE THE
UNCORRUPTED PROGRESSIVE DEMOCRATS, THEY DON'T TAKE ANY
CORPORATE PAC MONEY, SO HOW ARE THEY GOING TO WIN RACES?
NUMBER
ONE THEY ARE DOING A GOOD JOB OF RAISING MONEY LIKE ALISON
HARTSON AGAINST FEINSTEIN HAS RAISED 1/4 OF $1 MILLION, AND
DOUG APPLEGATE WHO WILL BE ON REBEL HEADQUARTERS TONIGHT HAS
RAISED A LOT OF MONEY BECAUSE HE NEARLY BEAT ISSA AND HE WILL
BEAT HIM THIS TIME, THEY ALSO NEED VOLUNTEERS.
I LOVE THIS
PROGRAM BECAUSE THE ONLY THING MORE VALUABLE THAN MONEY TO HIRE
STAFFERS AND GET THE VOTER ROLLS AND EVERYTHING THEY NEED TO WHEN
THE CAMPAIGN IS YOUR TIME, TIME IS MORE VALUABLE THAN MONEY.
SO
THE WEEKEND OF JANUARY 13 AND 14 THEY WANT TO DO CONCERTED ACTION
INVOLVING VOLUNTEERS BECAUSE THAT'S OUR STRENGTH.
IF WE ARE
GOING TO BEAT THE CORPORATE FUNDED DEMOCRATS AND THE
REPUBLICANS WE ALL HAVE TO WORK TOGETHER.
THIS IS WHAT THE
BERNIE SANDERS CAMPAIGN DID, AND THE JUSTICE DEMOCRATS STAFF IS
MOSTLY BERNIE SANDERS'S STAFF FROM THE ELECTION, THEY KNOW HOW
THIS WORKS, THEY CAN HELP YOU SET THIS UP, BUT THEY NEED YOU
GUYS TO STEP UP.
WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO STEP UP?
THEY ARE
LOOKING FOR 1000 PEOPLE TO SIGN UP TO HOST EVENTS.
AND WHEN YOU
HOST EVENTS, AND THE LINK IS RIGHT THERE,
JUSTICEDEMOCRATS.COM/HOSTWOFA -- IT'S MISSING THE "F" -- IT
DOESN'T MATTER, THE LINK IS IN THE DISCRETION BOX, YOU CAN
CLICK ON IT AND GET IT RIGHT AWAY.
IF YOU SAY I'VE NEVER
HOSTED AN EVENT, I HEAR YOU, BROTHER, THAT'S NO PROBLEM AT
ALL.
WHEN YOU SIGN UP FOR IT, A PERSON WHO HAS DONE IT BEFORE
WALKS YOU THROUGH IT.
A LOT OF PEOPLE HAVE MET THROUGH THESE
EVENTS, NOW THEY ARE ALL OVER THE COUNTRY BECAUSE THEY DID
THESE BEFORE FOR THE BERNIE SANDERS CAMPAIGN AND PEOPLE HAVE
BECOME FRIENDS, THEY HAVE GROUPS THAT ARE ALL OVER, WE WANT TO DO
IT AGAIN AND MAKE SURE THE UNCORRUPTED STRONG PROGRESSIVES
WIN.
THEY WANT TO DO 100 CANVASSING EVENTS, 100 PHONE
BANKS, WE COULD REACH 100,000 PEOPLE IN ONE WEEKEND AND IT
WILL BE AWESOME.
IF YOU CAN'T GIVE YOUR TIME, AT LEAST DONATE
TO MAKE THIS POSSIBLE, IT DOESN'T TAKE VERY MUCH MONEY AT
ALL, IT'S ONLY $48 PER EVENT.
THAT'S POTATO CHIPS, I GUESS,
AND COKE FOR THE EVENT, WHATEVER THEY USE IT FOR.
I'M SURE THEY
ARE USING IT FOR BETTER REASONS.
THAT'S $9699, THAT'S WHAT THEY
NEED TO RAISE, FOR THAT GO TO JUSTICEDEMOCRATS.COM/WOFA.
GO TO
THOSE LINKS, BE PART OF THE 1000 PEOPLE WHO SIGN UP, I WANT YOU
TO GET INVOLVED IN THIS AND MAKE SURE THESE GUYS WIN AND ACTUALLY
REPRESENT YOU AND IT WILL BE AWESOME, BUT MORE THAN ANYTHING
ELSE I WANT TO GET INVOLVED.
WHETHER IT'S JUSTICE DEMOCRATS
OR WOLF-PAC.COM OR ANYTHING ELSE, LOOK AROUND, DO YOUR
RESEARCH, BUT GET IN THE FIGHT.
IF YOU ARE SITTING AROUND ON
YOUR COUCH OR SOFA, GET UP.
THEY WANT YOU TO SIT THERE AND THINK
THAT CHANGE ISN'T POSSIBLE.
THAT IS THEIR BIGGEST WEAPON.
OUR
BIGGEST WEAPON IS HOPE, HOPE IS WHAT THE CIVIL RIGHTS LEADERS
HAD, HOPE IS WHAT THE WOMEN'S SUFFRAGETTES HAD, THEY WERE
AGAINST IMPOSSIBLE ODDS AND THEY WON ANYWAY.
SO WHATEVER TIME OR
RESOURCES YOU HAVE, DONATE TO THAT CAUSE HER ANY BECAUSE YOU
THINK IS RIGHT, FIGHT BACK AGAINST CORPORATE POWER AND THE
DONOR CLASS THAT'S TAKEN OVER OUR GOVERNMENT AND OUR
DEMOCRACY.
WOULDN'T IT BE AMAZING IF YOU COULD SAY, AND
YOU REALLY COULD IF THIS WORKS, YOU WERE ONE OF THE PEOPLE THAT
BROUGHT DEMOCRACY BACK TO AMERICA?
LET'S GO DO IT
TOGETHER.
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Colourful World - MujjO ( Inspired By Alan Walker ) - Duration: 3:20.Thanks for watching !!!
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Singer, Praiz Arrested By SARS, Held At Ajah Police Station|NVS News - Duration: 1:57.Singer, Praiz Arrested By SARS, Held At Ajah Police Station
Singer, Praiz Arrested By SARS, Held At Ajah Police Station.
Praise Ugbede Adejo also known as Praiz is a Nigerian singer, songwriter and music producer who shot into the limelight when he featured on the 2008 edition of MTNs Project Fame.
He is best known for his hit tracks, Rich and Famous, Mercy and Oshey featuring African music legend, Awilo Logomba.
Has been arrested by men of Nigerias feared Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).
The X3M Music signee was said to be en route the end of year party held by his record label when he was stopped by the police officials along Lekki-Epe expressway.
His mobile phone was smashed when he attempted to record what was happening and he's being held at Ajah police station.
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