• Republicans Bitterly Divided On Ukraine - Time For Trump To Put His Foo

    From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 14 04:37:10 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 16 08:29:13 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Thu Feb 17 00:02:15 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 23 13:26:17 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sat Feb 26 00:05:03 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Feb 27 17:11:23 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Feb 27 22:12:28 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 28 18:53:11 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 3 23:22:55 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 5 00:21:21 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 5 23:52:31 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Mar 6 00:30:06 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Mar 6 22:03:11 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 7 00:35:43 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 7 15:54:21 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 7 16:20:23 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 8 01:05:43 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 8 12:48:40 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 9 13:23:16 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 10 12:42:40 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 11 01:32:17 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 11 18:36:10 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 14 12:56:39 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 15 17:36:44 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 16 15:29:31 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 18 02:18:06 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 19 14:34:12 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 19 19:20:52 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 19 23:13:51 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Mar 20 18:47:32 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 21 22:10:31 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 22 20:52:39 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 23 02:33:44 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 24 01:06:06 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 24 02:26:40 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 25 19:54:43 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 26 17:10:33 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 28 21:39:23 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 28 23:45:45 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 29 00:33:41 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 29 14:25:41 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 29 16:40:37 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 30 14:42:42 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 30 19:38:03 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 30 23:53:47 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 31 16:52:44 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Thu Mar 31 18:38:53 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 1 13:53:34 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sat Apr 2 23:12:57 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 3 11:26:47 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 3 17:11:05 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 3 22:38:16 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 4 12:48:32 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 4 15:26:29 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 4 18:01:03 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 4 21:14:18 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 4 23:06:24 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Tue Apr 5 12:26:15 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Apr 6 01:58:53 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Apr 6 12:29:06 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Wed Apr 6 18:37:56 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Thu Apr 7 01:48:15 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Thu Apr 7 20:11:36 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 8 01:46:12 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Fri Apr 8 22:21:34 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sat Apr 9 12:50:27 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sat Apr 9 22:01:18 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 10 13:06:47 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 10 21:33:33 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Wi1liam T@21:1/5 to All on Mon Apr 11 10:57:08 2022
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh.tv-show, soc.men
    XPost: ca.politics, alt.war.vietnam

    Republicans Are Split Over Ukraine, Threatening a Rare Bipartisan
    Consensus

    Some GOPers think Biden is doing too little to counter Russia. The far
    right thinks he’s doing too much.

    By Jacqueline Feldscher
    Senior National Security Correspondent
    January 25, 2022


    President Donald Trump may have left Washington, but his pro-Russia views persist in at least part of the Republican Party.

    On Monday, Democratic Rep. Tom Malinowski’s New Jersey office began
    fielding phone calls from constituents who argued that Russia is only
    seeking peace by massing forces on the Ukrainian border and that America
    should stay out of the conflict. Several callers mentioned Fox host Tucker Carlson, who has suggested that the United States should be supporting
    Moscow instead of Kyiv.

    “My district director told me she’d talked to four people in the last hour
    who called in about this, and there were other calls. The phone was
    ringing while she was on the phone with those people,” said Malinowski,
    who served as the assistant secretary of State for democracy, human
    rights, and labor in the Obama administration. “I’ve been aware that this
    has been Tucker Carlson’s obsession for the last few weeks, but it was the first time I had seen my own constituents parroting his words back to me.”

    The calls demonstrate a split in how the Republican party is responding to Russia’s military buildup along Ukraine’s border. While many Republicans
    on Capitol Hill are criticizing Biden for being too weak on Russian leader Vladimir Putin, far-right members of the party are painting Russia as the victim and lambasting Bidenfor provoking Moscow. This evokes similar
    rhetoric to Trump, who has publicly sided with Putin over the U.S.
    government and said that he and the Russian leader get along.

    For more moderate members of the GOP, it’s “uncomfortable” to address
    these pro-Russia views that are lingering after Trump is out of office, Malinowski said.

    “I’ve raised the Tucker Carlson issue with some of my Republican
    colleagues who are very strong on Ukraine. A couple of them claim not to
    know that this is happening, which I find hard to believe,” he said. “It
    seems to me that a bunch of them are in denial, [and] that acknowledging
    the existence of this train in their party makes them very uncomfortable.”



    There’s bipartisan agreement on Capitol Hill that Ukraine’s sovereignty is important, but disagreement between the parties about the best way for
    America to support it. Democrats, led by Biden, have pushed for diplomacy
    and imposing harsher sanctions if Putin pushes further into Ukraine, but
    many mainstream Republicans are slamming Biden for not doing enough, and
    for not imposing consequences now.

    Despite these differences, lawmakers have so far been able to work
    together. Members of both parties traveled to Ukraine on a congressional delegation earlier this month, and Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-N.Y., the
    chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, will lead a second
    bipartisan trip this week. The Biden administration has also conducted
    “dozens” of briefings and meetings with lawmakers from both parties over
    the last month, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

    But outside Congress, right-wing Republicans such as Carlson are telling
    large audiences that the United States should not risk starting a war with Russia by supporting Ukraine.

    "Why is it disloyal to side with Russia but loyal to side with Ukraine?" Carlson said on his show on Monday night. "They're both foreign countries
    that don't care anything about the United States. Kind of strange."

    This echoes the isolationist views of Trump, who said during the campaign
    in 2015 that Putin is “highly respected” and that it was a “great honor”
    to be complimented by the Russian leader.

    “There are a lot of killers. We have a lot of killers,” Trump told Fox’s
    Bill O’Reilly in 2017, when pressed on Putin’s record of extrajudicial killings. “Well, you think our country is so innocent?”

    Malinowski says he’s worried this message will disrupt the remaining
    sliver of bipartisanship on Capitol Hill.

    “We’ve been clinging to a fragile unity in the Congress about Ukraine. Republicans and Democrats basically agree about which side we should be
    on, but I'm worried that this message is going out to a big chunk of the Republican base every night,” he said. “I hope that more of my Republican colleagues will confront this train in their party.”

    Some of them already have. Rep. Mike Turner, R-Ohio, appeared on Carlson’s
    show in November and argued that America should provide weapons and intelligence to Ukraine, an “incredibly important” strategic ally. This provoked a contentious exchange with Carlson, who questioned the
    congressman about why American troops should risk their lives defending Ukraine, even though Turner never suggested putting American boots on the ground.

    “Why would we take Ukraine’s side and not Russia’s side? It’s a sincere question. If you’re looking at America’s perspective, why? Who’s got the
    energy reserves? Who’s the major player in world affairs? Who’s the
    potential counterbalance against China, which is the actual threat?”
    Carlson said. “Why would we take Ukraine’s side? Why wouldn’t we be on
    Russia’s side? I’m totally confused.”

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)