I have a better Jeep story than this. Back in the day, my Jeep doors for my Wrangler were stolen from the CIA parking lot. 1994 time frame. Yes, u all read that correctly. Gone. (Maybe that was a sign that there was some problems in the organization😬 ) I thought my friends were playing a joke on me at first. And I was in a bind because I had to call the insurance company and tell them where it was parked. When I finally and awkwardly did – there was first silence and then total laughter on the other end. Probably not great for my cover status either, but I was a GS 9 and I needed to get money for some new damn doors! I eventually got a $4000 check reimbursement. The security staff were of zero help, never caught the perpetrators. 🤷🏻♂️ True story.
TOO OBSCURE TO MATTER
The building at 34 E 62 St NYC once housed the secret spy organization known as The Room, comprised of well-heeled guys, was blown up in an ugly divorce dispute hours after a ranting email sent to Fox News personalities Sean Hannity and Brit Hume, and others
Denis Alimov, FSB Alfa veteran and senior operative of Russia's new and "most secretive" assassination unit, walked into El Dorado Airport in Bogotá on Feb 24 looking like a tourist heading to Cartagena. He walked out in handcuffs.
He was undone by Google Translate.
🧵New @TheInsider investigation with @DerSpiegel — thread below.
A Russian khazzak told me a post-soviet joke:
A woman and her husband are sleeping in bed when she shoots up in a panic and rushes to the window. She throws the curtains open and sighs with relief. Instantly panic sets in again! she rushes out of the room! Her husband follows...
Most Russians have nothing against Americans. They’re usually curious, often friendly. The hostility you hear about tends to live more in television studios than in ordinary life.
That said, one night, about half a decade ago, in a pub in Sochi (named Dublin as it happens), a very solid gentleman, the sort built like a substantial wardrobe, at least 100kg of it, came up to me, fixed me with a serious look, jabbed a finger into my chest, and announced that I was a "pindo" (a rude slang term for Americans) and should go back to "Pindostan."
I told him, gently, that I was Irish.
The transformation was instant. His face lit up, he threw his arms around me like we were long-lost brothers, and declared his deep admiration for the MMA fighter Conor McGregor.
Sensing that this was not the moment for a nuanced discussion of McGregor’s personality, I agreed that Conor was indeed a great man and a credit to his country.
For the rest of the evening he addressed me exclusively as "Conor" and kept the shots coming with the generosity of a man determined to honour his favorite Irishman. I knocked them back dutifully, though I never drink shots, out of a healthy instinct for self-preservation.
I ran into him a few times afterwards around the city. Every time he spotted me, a grin would appear, the arm would go up in greeting, and you’d hear the same booming salute:
"Conor!"
Parents have complained for decades that getting into an elite independent school in Manhattan is harder than getting into Harvard; for the wealthy parents who are competing to spend about $70,000 a year, it’s an infamously complicated and time-intensive game of tutoring and networking that involves preschoolers sitting for assessments and “interviews” just before nap time. But the February 2026 notification week for children who applied to kindergartens in the city was more brutal than expected.
All month long, in Facebook groups like “Moms of the Upper East Side” and “UES Mommas,” parents of 4- and 5-year-olds had been venting about misguided expectations as they came to terms with getting wait-listed and rejected at the schools where they genuinely believed their children would soon enroll.
“Any other moms feeling disappointed in the private school results today?” asked one mother who struck out in the process. A steady stream of commiseration filled the comments section. “So much hard work and time put in for a disappointing outcome.” “Many tears have been shed,” wrote another. “Not sure how to proceed.” “Confused as to who got in,” added one well-connected observer. Another parent wrote, “It’s a bloodbath this year.”
Matt Stieb reports on why admissions to New York’s private kindergartens was unusually competitive this cycle: https://t.co/P2xe7VZSg0
Read this from beginning to end. It’s from the FBI interview of Christopher Steele in October 2018. It’s an interview of an FSB officer about Trump. The FBI obfuscated the original to make it difficult to read. They do this often with important information. Original in 2nd post.
I've been working on this for ages in various countries: the story of the intelligence buildup to Putin's 2022 invasion. How did the US and Britain find out so much, and why were Europe and Ukraine sceptical.
It's a long one:
https://t.co/VFqxQUPsKG
Hemingway considered reading essential to every writer’s development. He was a voracious reader himself, even on days he wrote.
He gave a 22-year-old aspiring writer a list of books to read, saying “Here’s a list of books any writer should have read as a part of his education… If you haven’t read these, you just aren’t educated. They represent different types of writing.”
Oleg Kalugin, a Soviet defector and former KGB Major General, served as Chief of Counterintelligence for foreign operations and supervised KGB intelligence activities in the United States.
This is his assessment of the Russian Orthodox Church under Vladimir Putin.
And of course the best German captured conversation of all, I`m afraid as I cant draw I have asked Grok to make a funny cartoon based on the text. Which wasnt too bad in fact.
Before leaving for his #KGB spy assignment in Japan, Stanislav Levchenko was given this advice by one of his supervisors:
"Stay away from #CIA... At best, you'll waste your time... Other officers trying to recruit Americans have been caught like flies in a honey pot."
Yuri Andropov
Dedicated Stalinist communist? The architect of capitalist perestroika? CIA plant? Simply a paranoid spook?
Whatever the answer, Putin has always made it clear he admires Andropov most of all Soviet leaders
Link to free article in reply