KISSINGER WENT TO THE BOILERS OF PEDRO BOTERO
I do not like to speak ill of those who die, quia de mortuis nisi bene, but today the world takes a deep breath knowing that Don Henry handed over the spoon. He had turned one hundred years old. These zionists last longer than uracel batteries. During my time as a correspondent in London I remember a brief meeting at the Claridge Hotel to ask him what the State Department's policy would be after Franco. The Secretary of State looked good. Tanned, he looked at me with his piercing eyes that I considered the sarcastic look of the Talmud. He didn't say anything, he smiled and left surrounded by his gorillas who almost knocked me down to make way for the almighty Minister of Foreign Affairs. A few days after that meeting he went to Madrid and what we Spaniards call the embrace of death occurred. Admiral Carrero Blanco was neither attentive nor persistent in considering himself a friend of the Americans. The next day, having just left the Jesuits' mass, his car flew almost fifty meters. With him the Franco regime flew. His “step by step” policy has had serious consequences for Europe, today fragmented and divided. He managed to blur the historical and humanistic sense of the old Europe of the homelands transformed into the homelands of the markets, genuflexing before the slogans of Freemasonry and the Pentagon. Everything that was cruel about him (two million dead in Vietnam, one hundred thousand Americans) was clever and jovial. He was a nice guy whose German accent was noticeable, his deep and enigmatic voice at press conferences. He liked soccer, he smoked American-flavored tobacco, I managed to photograph him leaving a soccer game at the Metropolitan Stadium in '82 and his wife Nancy photographed him when he was taking an elevator at the Ritz. He would be moved to tears like a good Jew if someone accused him of being a butterflier. Then he used the Auschwitz argument. He had been born in Germany and came as an interpreter with General Eisenhower's troops. He served as a Nazi hunter. He merciless to the Germans. Returning to Washington sponsored by Rockefeller he belonged to the band the Whitkizs. A series of characters all the same with brainwashing, good looks, tailored suits and a discreet and concentrated speech. Biden is one of the last of that streak. His elegant appearance however hides from him his black and cruel soul. They are capable of pressing the nuclear button. Kissinger's step by step by step, step by step, you have to go little by little without haste but without pause to win, for many countries, has been the path to hell, the disintegration of it; what we are experiencing in the Middle East and Ukraine, those of us who live in Yugoslavia, Gaza, Iraq and Afghanistan, the massacres in Africa. Kissinger, as an incentive to his global policy, supported ETA's terrorism and demanded an independent state for Catalonia when these whizkids know how to use the ruse as a false flag argument, attributing to the enemy the evil that they perpetrate. Well, I have survived this butter-pulling ogre, thank God. Let's break out the champagne and toast the death of the tyrant. With the disappearance of this Jewish-German, the world today can be calmer. Crime doesn't pay. Crime does not pay. May God settle the scoreMoscow, November 29, 2023
Photo: RIA-Novosti
Church and state authorities in Russia are working to reduce the sin of abortion that continues to plague the country.
Abortion was first legalized in Russia by Bolshevik authorities in 1920, and reached its peak when 5,463,300 abortions were committed in 1965 alone. After the fall of the Soviet Union, abortion remains legal, though thankfully, there has been marked improvement and the number of abortions has significantly dropped. In 2020, there were 450,000 officially recorded abortions in the country.
Both Church and state representatives agree that it would be very difficult to achieve an outright ban on abortion, but they have been working to steadily chip away at abortion rights and to encourage families to have more children.
His Holiness Patriarch Kirill has confronted the State Duma on the issue a number of times, calling for legislators to develop measures that support motherhood and childhood, thereby creating conditions that will help reduce abortions. Church representatives have repeatedly called for abortion to at least be removed from the medical insurance system, and in 2017, Mother Ksenia (Chernega), abbess of St. Alexis Monastery in Moscow and head of the Moscow Patriarchate’s legal department, was able to announce that abortions covered within the medical system were greatly reduced—to cases of rape and imprisonment.
Most recently, Pat. Kirill and others have been calling for a legislative ban on inducing women to have an abortion. Such a ban has been enacted already in the Mordovia and Tver Provinces, but should be extended to the federal level, the Church primate says, reports rbc.ru.
The Patriarch made the call in his address to the opening of the XI General Church Congress on Social Service, noting that, “Unfortunately, the number of abortions in the country remains high.”
Banning the practice of persuading women to have abortions would be especially relevant for the country in the context of the demographic crisis, Pat. Kirill said. He also noted that the Church currently operates more than 80 shelters for women in difficult situations. Church social workers also meet with women who have already decided to have an abortion to present them with feasible alternatives.
Earlier this month, Crimean authorities, followed by authorities in the Tver Province, announced that private clinics were refusing to perform abortions. In July, the Ministry of Health said the country plans to tighten control over the circulation of abortifacient drugs by the end of the year.
The Diocese of Simferopol and Crimea, headed by His Eminence Metropolitan Tikhon (Shevkunov), also submitted an initiative to the Public Chamber this month calling for the inducement to abortion to be a finable offense. The issue was discussed at a recent session of the Commission for the Preservation and Strengthening of Traditional Russian Spiritual and Moral Values.
Met. Tikhon, who attended the session, spoke of the inducement to abortion as “compelling a woman to artificially terminate her pregnancy by persuasion, offers, bribery, deception, or some other demands.”
The issue has also been raised in the federal Russian Parliament. Following on the proposals of Pat. Kirill and Met. Tikhon, Senator Kovitidi, a member of the Federation Council (Upper House of the Federal Assembly) from Crimea publicly voiced his approval for the initiative.
“It’s obvious that deliberate actions aimed at forcing a pregnant woman to artificially terminate her pregnancy … should entail punishment,” Kovitidi said.
“Large families should become the norm of public life in Russia. To do this, women must want to give birth to children. The state should consider additional measures of material support for families in which four, five or more children are born,” she added.
Deputies of the State Duma (Lower House) have also promised to consider reducing the permissible period for having an abortion from 12 to 8 weeks, and from 22 to 12 weeks in cases of rape