I'm disabled but l don't let it hold me back
#Nafofella Trained #N△FO
member of #HellsFellas and leader of the #IronSisters
Only except DMs from Fellas
Oh, the irony…
Zakharova cast doubt on whether Russia’s enemies are even human, and then proceeded to describe Americans in the way people often describe Russians:
“They are the ones who fenced themselves in with barbed wire, wrapped themselves in it, and then wonder why no one likes or understands them.”
Video: St. Petersburg International Economic Forum
😁 This is SO good 🔽
“What happened today is undoubtedly a personal slap in the face to President Putin.”
— Russian journalist Dmitry Borisenko describes last night’s attack on Saint Petersburg and the real attitude of the city’s residents toward Putin
@RachelMoiselle With respect Rachel, I raised this on day 1 of the war in 2022 and launched tracking of the Alumina ship transfers on 19 February this year.
We set up our website https://t.co/CzVaxErflx about 5 weeks ago.
The information was there. It’s only this week gone mainstream.
@KaterynaLis@Lisabanksmann It’s not too late to call your representatives! Ask your vote to vote YES on the bill. Every constituent call is tallied and really can make a difference!
‼️Happening now: Today and tomorrow, the House may vote on the Ukraine Support Act (H.R. 2913).
The bill was brought to the floor through a discharge petition: a procedure in the U.S. House of Representatives that allows a majority of members to force a bill out of committee and bring it to the floor, even if House leadership does not want to advance it.
218 members (a majority of the full House) have already signed this petition, and the bill can now be discharged from committee and brought to the floor for consideration.
This discharge petition was led by @RepGregoryMeeks (D), @RepDonBacon (R), and @RepBrianFitz (R) .
Under this process, the first vote is the motion to discharge, followed by a rules vote. The rule determines whether the House can proceed to consider the bill for final passage. Only after that comes the final passage vote. So there will be three votes in total, and the third is final.
For the bill to pass, it needs a simple majority. Including vacancies, the current absolute majority threshold is at least 216.
At this point, it is not likely that all votes will happen today, as voting is already delayed.
The Ukraine Support Act (H.R. 2913) strengthens Ukraine’s defense, tightens sanctions on Russia, and supports diplomatic efforts to return abducted Ukrainian children.
Here is the bill itself - https://t.co/nRScZxO7n6
Here is the link to follow the live vote in the House -
https://t.co/0uGJ0kLVF4
According to Telex, Orbán personally ordered the March 5 raid on the Ukrainian “gold convoy”, and even the timing of the operation came from the government. The convoy was carrying 40 million US dollars, 35 million euros, and 9 kilograms of investment gold from Austria to Ukraine when Hungarian police and TEK commandos stopped it at the Alacska rest area. The Hungarian authorities seized the assets, while the Ukrainian couriers were later released and expelled.
Telex reports that the raid was not professionally justified by the available evidence. The official suspicion was money laundering, but Austrian authorities found no irregularities, and the Austrian central bank said cross-border cash transport between banks is normal and legal. After Fidesz lost the election, the Hungarian tax authority returned the seized assets, and the immigration bans against the Ukrainian couriers were withdrawn.
Multiple sources told Telex that the operation was politically driven. The Constitutional Protection Office admitted that the decision to carry out the raid specifically on March 5 came from the state secretariat supervising civilian intelligence services under the Prime Minister’s Cabinet Office. Telex’s sources say this order ultimately came from Orbán, who was being continuously informed during the operation.
The alleged motive was Orbán’s anger over Ukraine and the Druzhba oil pipeline. On the same day as the raid, Orbán publicly said Hungary would force Ukraine to restart oil deliveries “by force”. The government then used the seizure for propaganda, suggesting that the Ukrainian money was suspicious and possibly linked to funding opposition forces, even though the evidence for this was weak.
@marcokan565972@KyivPost Its what they do every single time and the only difference was that they no longer used Orcbans family members company! Its now known that Orcban planned it to fuck up 🇺🇦
Hungary has dropped its two-year veto on EU military reimbursements for Ukraine, unlocking €6.6 billion in funding for Kyiv under the European Peace Facility.
https://t.co/43ZviTM2gA