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Alfonso Diferieri's avatar

I’m subscribed but I can’t access this content… what’s the deal?

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Sifl's avatar

Me too.

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TexasMela's avatar

What were the boxing movies Dr Horne suggested?

I enjoyed the interview and ordered 2 of Dr. Hornet’s books: Jazz and Justice and Facing the Rising Sun.

Thanks Katie and Matt!

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JAE's avatar

I have no problem with Dr Horne’s opinions being aired here, good for Mr Taibbi and Ms Halper. But I doubt I’ll be a paid subscriber in the future, I can look to mainstream media and academia for America bashing any day. Having lived in the Caucasus and the Middle East for many years, I am only too familiar with dictators and authoritarians. If Dr Horne believes that the US is a greater threat than Russia and China to the world, he should move to one or the other. They treat minorities and people of color very well, no?

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Thom Prentice's avatar

You should move. Get out!

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Ngungu's avatar

> If Dr Horne believes that the US is a greater threat than Russia and China to the world, he should move to one or the other.

Why? Is he only allowed to praise the U.S. and not criticize it? He lives and works there AND pays his taxes there so why can he not criticize?

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Russel's avatar

After all the cia caused disruptions in foreign countries during the Cold War. I don’t think US administration is much better.

Nevertheless, it is difficult to suggest that China’s CCP is acting benevolent in any way

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Boris Petrov's avatar

FYI -- Why Did Russia Give Away Crimea Sixty Years Ago?

https://www.wilsoncenter.org/publication/why-did-russia-give-away-crimea-sixty-years-ago

Crimea was part of Russia from 1783, when the Tsarist Empire annexed it a decade after defeating Ottoman forces in the Battle of Kozludzha, until 1954, when the Soviet government transferred Crimea from the Russian Soviet Federation of Socialist Republics (RSFSR) to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (UkrSSR). The transfer was announced in the Soviet press in late February 1954, eight days after the Presidium of the USSR Supreme Soviet adopted a resolution authorizing the move on 19 February. The text of the resolution and some anodyne excerpts from the proceedings of the Presidium of the USSR Supreme Soviet meeting on 19 February were published along with the very brief announcement.[1] Nothing else about the transfer was disclosed at the time, and no further information was made available during the remainder of the Soviet era.

Not until 1992, just after the Soviet Union was dissolved, did additional material about this episode emerge. A historical-archival journal, Istoricheskii arkhiv (Historical Archive), which had been published in the USSR from 1955 until 1962, began appearing again in 1992 with transcriptions of declassified documents from the former Soviet archive.

That the transfer was justified solely by Crimea’s cultural and economic affinities with Ukraine is -- far-fetched. In the 1950s, the population of Crimea — approximately 1.1 million — was roughly 75 percent ethnic Russian and 25 percent Ukrainian. A sizable population of Tatars had lived in Crimea for centuries until May 1944, when they were deported en masse by the Stalinist regime to barren sites in Central Asia, where they were compelled to live for more than four decades and were prohibited from returning to their homeland. Stalin also forcibly deported smaller populations of Armenians, Bulgarians, and Greeks from Crimea, completing the ethnic cleansing of the peninsula. Hence, in 1954, Crimea was more “Russian” than it had been for centuries.

Crimea had originally been an “autonomous republic” (avtonomnaya respublika) in the RSFSR, but its status was changed to that of an “oblast’” (province) in the RSFSR in 1945, ostensibly because the forced removal of the Crimean Tatars had eliminated the need for autonomy. After the Crimean oblast was transferred to the UkSSR in 1954, it retained the status of an oblast’ within Soviet Ukraine for 37 years. In early 1991, after a referendum was held in the UkrSSR and a resolution was adopted a month later by the UkrSSR parliament, the status of Crimea was upgraded to that of an “autonomous republic.” Crimea retained that designation within Ukraine after the Soviet Union broke apart.

A tragic irony of the Crimean transfer is that an action of sixty years ago, taken by Moscow to strengthen its control over Ukraine, has come back to haunt Ukraine today.

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