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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhat The Holy Hell?
https://www.rawstory.com/rubio-russia/my words: Bold is mine.
'Senators fume after sanctioned Russians tour Capitol Hill: 'They came for one purpose!'
'A bipartisan duo of senators fired off a furious letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, as well as Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent, demanding to know how a delegation of Russian lawmakers was allowed to visit Capitol Hill and tour it with members of Congress.
The letter, sent by Sens. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and Roger Wicker (R-MS), flagged the serious national security concerns at stake, noting that all the visitors from the Russian Duma who held meetings with members of Congress and the executive branch, are subject to U.S. sanctions....
They concluded by asking a series of questions of Rubio and Bessent, including "What is the justification for waiving sanctions on these individuals?" and "Was a counterintelligence assessment conducted for all individuals traveling to the U.S.?"
spanone
(141,658 posts)Deuxcents
(26,988 posts)Walleye
(44,898 posts)Were gonna get in trouble if we keep thinking that the rules are gonna hold up. You dont bring Russians into the capital you idiots
SheltieLover
(80,649 posts)31st Street Bridge
(218 posts)We are not free.
Walleye
(44,898 posts)That kind of thing wouldve been important and a scandal just a few years back
SalviaBlue
(3,110 posts)SheltieLover
(80,649 posts)Buns_of_Fire
(19,165 posts)I'd love to know who their elected tour guides were.
Wednesdays
(22,640 posts)Russia is now our ally.
jfz9580m
(17,239 posts)I was never very sold on the Russian influence thesis because I am not a believer in influence per se. I know that behaviours that can make one seem like a zombie could just mean one no longer gives a shit. These societies tend to make people give up and resign themselves to being their worst selves.
I used to read a New Yorker piece by Maria Konnikova over and over again at a dark time in my life. I suffered from no illness, but did feel I had no control at all over my life. The piece is on Martin Seligmans theories on Learned Helplessness. That definitely was (and to some extent residually still is) my state of mind after a particularly shitty job at this spooky hell that seemed to be a fusion of the worst parts of China, Russia, the Middle East, Si Valley, the US and India. Yeah that was awesome:
https://www.newyorker.com/science/maria-konnikova/theory-psychology-justified-torture
By Maria Konnikova
January 14, 2015
He is no scholar of interrogation, he says, but as he understands it, the point of interrogation is to get at the truth and to have the person believe that telling the truth will lead to good treatment. Does learned helplessness actually achieve that end?
Heres what we know: learned helplessness can indeed be a severe form of torture. The inability to control ones environment has repeatedly been shown to create not only anger and frustration but, eventually, deep and often insurmountable depression.
In a sense, inducing learned helplessness makes a person give up. We shouldnt forget the high price at which the learned-helplessness findings came: many of the animals used in the studies died or became severely ill shortly thereafter. So is learned helplessness an effective way of causing incredible pain? No doubt.
But heres the more relevant question: Does the condition, in turn, make someone more likely to tell the truth and give up important information that had previously remained hidden? Here we have no direct dataafter all, there have never been controlled torture trials that we know ofbut we do have some theoretical basis in the study of severe depression to suggest that it will do no such thing. People whove given up lack all incentive. Once they are in that state of hopelessness, there is no longer a way to motivate them.
Absent any possible inducement or motivation, most people just want to quit. The threat of pain or even death no longer makes much of a difference: Nothing I do or say matters, so why bother? A person in a state of learned helplessness is someone who is passive, someone who has abandoned all active will and desire. He can tell the truth, yes, but why? Lying or saying whatever it is that the torturer wants to hear is just as likely to attain the same result. A person without motivation is not a person who can be induced to tell deep truths: the incentive simply isnt there.
I think learned helplessness would make someone less defiant and more likely to compliantly tell the interrogator what he wants to hear, Seligman said. It would also likely undermine the belief that telling the truth will lead to good treatment. In other words, it would do the opposite of what its users in this particular context intended.
I was not mentally ill at any point so this piece and these two others were a source of comfort to me in those lonely hell years when I was not even on DU:
https://ia800501.us.archive.org/19/items/joost-meerloo-rape-of-the-mind/%20Joost%20Meerloo_Rape%20of%20the%20mind.pdf
I cannot seem to copy the text, but it is Joost Meerloos Rape of the Mind and details the effect of interrogation and torture techniques used by both Nazis and Stalinists. It is well worth reading. I would recommend it to all DUers.
Finally, on more ubiquitous terrain away from Russia, China, Nazi Germany etc. are our good ol Si Valley etc. creeps. I personally consider this one of the best pieces written on contemporary mental health crises. It is written by an academic called Ruth Cain:
https://theconversation.com/how-neoliberalism-is-damaging-your-mental-health-90565
Published: January 30, 2018 7:31am EST
Ruth Cain, University of Kent
There is a widespread perception that mental ill health is on the rise in the West, in tandem with a prolonged decline in collective well-being. The idea that there are social and economic causes behind this perceived decline is increasingly convincing, amid what has been termed the zombie economics and grinding austerity, which have followed the global financial crash.
In particular, there is growing concern that the conditions and effects of neoliberalism the enervating whirl of relentless privatisation, spiralling inequality, withdrawal of basic state support and benefits, ever-increasing and pointless work demands, fake news, unemployment and precarious work is partly to blame. Perhaps most wearying are the invasive yet distant commands from media, state institutions, advertisements, friends or employers to self-maximise, persevere, grab your slice of the diminishing pie, because you are worth it although you must constantly prove it, every day.
Depression in this context may appear almost self-protective: an opt-out from an unwinnable set of continual competitions. The recent rise in diagnoses of mental illnesses and developmental disorders involving states of agitation and hyperstimulation is similarly interesting. In the case of ADHD, for example, a persons hyperactivity and distractibility render them officially disordered or even disabled, to the extent that they are supposedly unable to cope with a hyperstimulating, late-capitalist environment. Yet they are, in another sense, entirely in tune with an economy of non-stop distraction, in which attention is repeatedly grabbed at and financially exploited.
I did feel like the place I was working at was more like a hostage situation than an honest job offer a few weeks after I got there. There were some pretty decent Russian women there who seemed as miserable as I was and one of them said something about the place being like Kremlin.
I think the average Russian or Chinese person is embattled in a different way from say the average American or Indian. If you are used to something closer to a flawed democracy (and as I am, relatively Westernized/Anglicized), it is a real shock to the system. This was 2011 and this slow descent into a Panopticon was only just becoming more overt. Remember the NSA scandal of the Bush years? So Google etc openly going full police state, was a shock to me as an early, isolated human research subject (there is no other term for it).
It was a spooky hell overall, but over the years I did notice how many Ransomware gangs come out of Russia and I wondered if that was the deal. One of my favorite journalists is Yasha Levine and he has roots in both Ukraine and Russia I think and he was a bit skeptical of Russiagate etc.
Based on my experiences I had a suspicion that Russian ransomware is potentially the real issue rather than influence which is cited more often.
And most of us have such piddly secrets. What embitters me so much is that my only secret was bloody marijuana. FFS at least a third to one half of the Republican frat boys at that shithole are probably high on MJ most of the time. It was such bullshit.
Otoh if you have secrets like these, I can see how Russian (or Chinese) ransomware hackers would have you right where they want you:
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/05/donald-trump-epstein-files-allegations-00816123
The woman said other people were present, but she couldnt recall who. Trump asked them to leave the room, then said something to the effect of, Let me teach you how little girls are supposed to be, according to the interview notes. Trump then unzipped his pants and put her head down to his penis, she recalled in the interview. She said she bit the shit out of it. In response, she said he pulled her hair and punched her on the side of her head.
Get this little bitch the hell out of here, the woman recalled him saying. At that point, she said, people reentered the room. The FBI interviews dont contain information about how the incident ended or how the woman exited the encounter.
That place I worked at was full of gloomy scientists who seemed to be cleaning up for these pseudo elite shitheads.
My boss there was a decent man that way, but kinda annoying ..he was not a bad man, but I am not a self-loathing enough Calvinist to think that some pot is a reason to be an inductee into a bloody police state that Google forces because a bunch of American politicians and people like Marvin Minsky went and hung out with Epstein and then presumably got pwned by Russian hackers.
So I came back to India. This is all kinda what I pieced together over the years after.
The scientists there were pretty respectable. But it seems like the worst use of having nothing to hide to go and let Google exploit that. At that point you will have something serious to hide- having helped Google usher in a police state because of all the sexual harassment and underage banging that creeps like Andy Rubin, Amit Singhal, Kanury S Rao, Lawrence Krauss, Walter Lewin, Geoff Marcy, Marvin Minsky etc have engaged in. That is not a metaphorical vaccine so much as way to groom people (women especially) to accept a creepy, corrupt and undemocratic police state as normal or worse inevitable.
That place struck me as a fusion of all the worst types of regressive and fascistic cultures and values sending womens rights especially into the dark ages.
A fourth piece that really helped me at that time in my life (2014-2019) was a piece by Alison Taylor on the cultures of corrupt firms:
https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1076&context=public_integrity
Ferrets are Cool
(22,980 posts)MadLinguist
(908 posts)were Derrick Van Orden (R-WI.), Andy Ogles (R-TN.), Eli Crane (R-AZ) and Vicente Gonzalez (D-TX) according to this Washington Post peice.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2026/04/03/congress-russia-caucus-vladimir-putin/
hamsterjill
(17,593 posts)That makes me furious.
littlemissmartypants
(33,778 posts)hamsterjill
(17,593 posts)Sixth generation Texan here - and I immediately went the "Henry Cuellar" scenario. Let's hope that YOUR idea is the right one.
quaint
(5,112 posts)His health care and immigration positions must be why he is a Democrat.
littlemissmartypants
(33,778 posts)quaint
(5,112 posts)sop
(18,681 posts)calimary
(90,100 posts)PhilG
(56 posts)I'm not surprised to see DVO on this list. He is an embarrassment to Wisconsin. I'm expecting to see Senator Ron Johnson was in on this too.
fyi - I am one of Derrick's constituents
calimary
(90,100 posts)The part that really hurts us all is that we're forced to be the donald's constituents.
I can't wait for this miserable era to be OVER!!!
IronLionZion
(51,305 posts)progressoid
(53,204 posts)Joinfortmill
(21,200 posts)calimary
(90,100 posts)Disgraceful! They decide to go to RUSSIA on AMERICA's Independence Day!
Somebody please explain that one to me.
Zelda_Orchid
(84 posts)NoMoreRepugs
(12,104 posts)littlemissmartypants
(33,778 posts)Joinfortmill
(21,200 posts)blue-wave
(5,174 posts)There will be no answers. They are letting in enemies of this country. Allowing them to collect intelligence in the hallowed and I'm sure security sensitive areas of our country and government.
I swear they want us to be an appendage of the kremlin. Anything I say will not be loud enough or strong enough to convey the treachery going on here. It is a national disgrace.
AverageOldGuy
(3,884 posts)Planting electronic bugs in the Capitol restrooms?
Checking out routes for another Jan 6 riot?
Sizing up an office for Putin?
MadameButterfly
(4,054 posts)Is he dead yet?
Reasons for sanctioned Russians in US?
Latest Trump conspiracy?
Have Republicans cried uncle yet?
struggle4progress
(126,221 posts)EuterpeThelo
(371 posts)"Watch it bring it to your n-n-n-n-n-n-n-n knees, knees
Oh ah, I wanna see you bleed..."
Both lines seem appropriate.
Initech
(108,815 posts)Hey Putin stooges, get the fuck out of DC, you are not welcome here!
Irish_Dem
(81,426 posts)Looks like Congress are slow learners.
dlk
(13,257 posts)n/t
ffr
(23,405 posts)about it. This is the first I've run across, by accident, because even the title doesn't mention it.
FoxNewsSucks
(11,739 posts)
Hosting Russian spies on day one in the first term.
Amazing how he only smiles and is happy around Putin or others working to destroy America
