Tuesday 24th of December 2024

a huge cultural phenomenon......

The II BRICS+ Fashion Summit took place in Moscow on October 3-5, 2024. Who attended, what are their expectations from BRICS and why is the summit such a huge cultural phenomenon?

 

The East with a love for fashion: the faces of the BRICS+Fashion Summit    BY Ksenia Muratshina

 

BRICS plus the rest of the world

“O-o-o-o, Malaysia – truly Asia!” quoting a famous slogan, a tall, broad-shouldered Indian waves cheerfully at the Malaysian delegation. “Nice to meet you!”

BRICS-plus is the only platform that brings together so many countries on an equal footingJay Ishak

At the other end of the hall, a crowd gathers to listen to a presentation by a designer from Myanmar. Afterwards, a woman in national dress and with a beehive hairstyle squeezes through to the speaker: “I am a designer from Botswana. Nice to meet you, and I would be glad to work with you!”

A participant from Mauritius arrives in the lobby of the Zaryadye complex with his luggage, after a many-hour transit flight. Despite his fatigue, he is in an excellent mood: “It is a great pleasure and honor for me to represent my country here. I hope to make new contacts and exchange ideas. My visit is being covered by Mauritius television.”

Inspired guests from Latin America discuss the Heritage exhibit and prepare for the presentations. Delegates from Oceania, whose journey here took even longer, are eager to take pictures with everyone and talk passionately about Fashion Weeks and the unique crafts of their islands.

In another session, speakers from India and Pakistan stand side by side, with an Indian suggesting that the next summit be held in Goa or Islamabad. No, that was not a mistake. Goa or Islamabad.

The spirit of cooperation and engagement that BRICS embodies is strikingly evident in this meeting. Here visitors are surrounded by a real whirlwind of excitement, fashion and beauty. Designers show off their creativity. There is a real polyphony of languages and cultures. Glamorous dresses, elegant costumes, national costumes of all styles rustle around the hall. It is as if the whole world had gathered for the summit, and this is not an exaggeration: the number of countries that sent representatives exceeded a hundred.

Beauty is a soft power (BRICS as an opportunity)

The issues of the Fashion Summit are far from political – the development of brands and national traditions in fashion, preservation of crafts, experience of Fashion Weeks of different countries, environmental impact of the fashion industry – but it is already having an impact in the world. While earlier, according to the participants, awareness of BRICS was low, now the situation is changing in front of our eyes: people are becoming curious about what BRICS is and how to establish cooperation with the group.

“BRICS is a big chance,” says Bench Bello, a Filipino designer and founder of Manila Fashion Week. “I would love for the Philippines to join BRICS, and I will be telling everyone about the opportunities it offers when I return home.”

Colombo Fashion Week director Ajay Vir Singh notes: “BRICS is a big block with a huge population, and its members are dynamic countries with rich history. For developing economies, it represents an alternative to the British Commonwealth.” Sri Lanka is interested in contacts with designers, including bilateral exchanges with Russia.

Su Yonggang (Sichuan Institute of Art) points out that his university has not had any fashion cooperation with BRICS countries. Now he is interested in developing relations in different directions with universities in Russia and other participants.

Raman Dutta, head of India’s Brands & Sourcing Leaders, has previously had the opportunity to work with a Brazilian designer. At the summit, he is keen on promoting Indian brands and making new contacts: I want a lot of Indian brands to become global. Not only Indian, but also Russian and Brazilian brands, and others. Each brand speaks for a country’s culture.

“BRICS-plus is the only platform that brings together so many countries on an equal footing.”

Iranian fashion designer Mansoureh Mirzael wants to begin the joint production of headwear and accessories with Russia, and thanks to BRICS he expects to make contacts in other countries as well.

For Turkmenistan-based designer Ayna Durdylyyewa, it is important to “develop national culture both within the country and by showing it to the world.” She hopes BRICS+ will provide her with the opportunity to participate in joint collections, workshops and meetings, and new partnerships. This summit, Ayna believes, “should be given more than five stars, as such a large-scale event gives everyone ideas, promotes growth and opens up many new directions.”

For Sayat Dosybayev, the founder of Kazakhstan Fashion Week, “The summit is an occasion to be surprised and amazed, it represents fashion without borders.” His country is attracted to fashion-related changes with BRICS+ members and with the rest of Asia.

Sun Guitan was sent by the Chinese Designers Association to present a collection. “BRICS and BRICS+,” he says, “are big growth points. For me, participating opens up new perspectives, and represents a good chance to move forwards.”

Navel Nedjari, founder and director of Algiers Fashion Week, is trying to take in both the summit and Moscow Fashion Week. But, as he rushes past, he manages to say that “Moscow is the best place to promote Algerian designers and tell the world about them.”

“Being part of BRICS is a great opportunity.”

Myanmar designer Maythu Lwin believes: “It’s a great opportunity to be part of BRICS. There are many cultures in BRICS, and I am happy to represent my country, to talk about it.”

Mohamad Saghir, director of Lebanese Fashion Week, has had time to meet many new designers. “We are all in the same business,” he concludes.

Kyrgyz designer Nurzat Jeenbek-kyzy emphasizes: “Russia is opening new doors for participants with this summit.”

Cavita Taragi (Chitkara University, India) believes that “the summit is a great idea, a wonderful platform for exchanging ideas and for collaboration between cultures.” She would like to develop fully-fledged inter-university ties with Russia.

It is a good initiative of BRICS to bring everyone together

Jay Ishak, president of the Malaysian Official Designers’ Association, compares the summit to last year’s: “There are many more countries, it is more exciting, more global, with more potential collaboration.” The last one was business-oriented, this one is focused on culture, heritage, and preservation of tradition in the fashion world. BRICS+ is the only platform that brings together so many countries, on an equal basis, no matter where you come from or how big your country is. Only Russia has been able to do that. Face-to-face communication is important for connections. You cannot Google it. I am very proud to be part of such an event.

Susan Sabet (Egyptian Fashion and Design Council) lamented that “we need more awareness of BRICS in Egypt. But, she continues, “when I go home, I will tell all the media outlets how beneficial it is for Egypt to be connected with so many countries now.” Susan calls the summit “an amazing event for networking.” In terms of areas for connections within BRICS, she highlights textiles, ready-to-wear, production, small brands, opening retail markets, and inviting designers to fashion weeks.

Kuwaiti designer Montaha Al Ajeel was struck by the occupancy of the halls: “These are not the half-empty halls of the Paris and New York Fashion Weeks.” Participation in BRICS+ would be very beneficial for Kuwait, she believes.

Cahn Nguyen (Cooper&Co., Vietnam) cites the length of the summit as an advantage. Next year, he plans to invite BRICS+ designers to Vietnam Fashion Week.

Malaysian designer Yani Bakhtiar recalls that, of the BRICS countries, she has already had contacts with India and China. Through BRICS+, she hopes to expand her range of partnerships.

Indonesian fashion designer Ali Charisma also praises the opportunities offered by BRICS+: “These are completely new markets.” He is interested in contacts with Russian companies and the opportunity to learn “how the market works, how designers work.” His compatriot Febby Mahendra Putra (Tribun News), after calculating the statistics, concludes that in Indonesia, thanks to the participation of just one designer and one journalist in the summit, interest in BRICS has increased manifold: “Everyone reads the news on it and shares it on social media.” What is more, some Indonesian students from MSU also came to Zaryadye: they just read the news and wanted to listen to the sessions and see the designers and their work.

Fashion designers from Uzbekistan Nilufar Abduvalieva and Barno Khalilova present traditional clothes made of natural silk with unique designs. They are looking forward to returning next year to show their whole collection.

Nyamtsetseg Nyamjav, designer and lecturer at the Urlakh Erdem Fashion Design Institute (Mongolia), is glad to have the opportunity to see designers from all over the world, discuss options for working together with representatives of different organizations, and invite new brands to Ulaanbaatar Fashion Week. The main idea that she is impressed with is that “life in the fashion world no longer revolves only around Europe and the United States.”

Bediz Yildirim (Istanbul Fashion Academy and Bediz Co.) highlighted the “continuous dialog, two-side exchanges and good chance to build relationships all over the world” and hopes for “larger joint projects with BRICS countries.” In Turkey, she said, everybody wonders what happens next with the issue of joining BRICS. The world is changing, people see the results, the statistics. BRICS is huge, and Turkey can be a part of it, too. I am excited about it, we can build forces together.

Mubashar Naseer Butt (Pakistan Readymade Garments Manufacturers and Exporters Association) is confident: “The future for BRICS is bright. I hope Pakistan will join this community, and we need a forum to discuss economic issues – BRICS, Russia, Pakistan. We should start meeting each other and make friends).”

Mehdi Ghalenovi, director of the Iran Public Diplomacy Foundation, agrees with him: “BRICS needs to create an economic platform for interaction solely within the group, and something in the way of a shared currency. Then we will be resilient to external shocks and sanctions and will be able to solve any problems among ourselves.”

Akashdeep Singh, President of the Indian Business Council – Russia, says: “It should be clear to anyone that BRICS and BRICS+ are economic powers, with huge territorial and human resources. That’s why there’s so much interest in us in the world. There is simply no better union, the question is how quickly we can achieve it. It should start with an exchange of knowledge, people, and with media support, and it should be worked on for several years. There is more that unites us than divides us. We need to understand that and meet each other.”

Multicultural stories

Those attending the summit were able to could meet representatives of a wide variety of cultures, including those who, thanks to twists of fate, have acquired several cultural identities but maintain them with equal respect.

Indian-born Manjulakshmi Gills is a Qatari fashion designer based in New York. She sews outfits for celebrities: “Qatar is not too exposed globally. I want to put it on the global map.” Out of the BRICS countries, I have worked with Brazil, South Africa and China, but there has never been such a wide opportunity to communicate as there is now. The designer would like to cooperate with Russia on the purchase of fabrics, production of hats, exchanges between models and photographers and on magazine publications.

Halima Hadir is an Italian designer from Tunisia. Her clothes represent “a mix of cultures from Tunisia, Italy and Morocco.” Halima is active in Tunisian Fashion Week and works with a company that collects plastic from the Tunisian coast for recycling. It is her first time in Russia, and she wants to discover our country and culture. She describes the summit as “like a dream – there is an opportunity to see designers from all over the world, and discover new techniques and models. I met a lot of cultures here, and it will push me to propose new designs.”

Reynier Abello is a Filipino who lives in Cambodia and Laos. In Zaryadye he is exhibiting his collection, which combines tradition and modernity. In BRICS, the designer dreams of establishing contacts with Russia in the field of clothing production. Following the summit, he also became interested in Africa: “It’s a very good initiative of BRICS to bring everyone together.”

Positively shocked

Most of the participants are in Russia for the first time. Everyone is experiencing a real culture shock, not only from the diversity of BRICS+, but also from the host country. The most frequent epithet used by participants when describing their impressions is “amazing”. Some people discovered Russian fashion, others visited Moscow for the first time, having only seen it “in the movies”, while others visited Red Square, “a dream come true – to feel its energy, and remember the iconic figures in Russia’s history. Everyone is delighted with the architecture, the sights and, in addition, they admit that they were struck by how open, friendly and interested in getting to know other cultures the Russians were.

Indian researcher Ṛta Kapur Chishti who has dedicated her talk to the importance of preserving handmade and natural materials in production, talks in an interview about her respect for Russian history and her love of Russian literature: Aleksandr Pushkin, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Ivan Turgenev, Maksim Gorky, Osip Mandelstam and Marina Tsvetaeva. She quotes some lines from The Captain’s Daughter from memory and asks which of Russia’s contemporary writers are worth reading. Your correspondent from NEO suggested that she read books by Dmitry Kulikov and Zakhar Prilepin.

Numerous journalists from India who have flown in to cover the summit were impressed by the way Russian culture combines a combination of innovation and respect for history. Reynier Abello felt “inspired by the atmosphere, the vibe of the people.” Mubashar Nasir Butt laments that “in Pakistan they know little about Russia. We need forums like this to let everyone know how wonderful everything is here, from the art to the food.” Canh Nguyen expressed similar sentiments. And Nurzat Jeenbek-kyzyzy summed up the feelings of many of those present: “Russia is a country to which the soul is drawn.”

* * *

These emotions and smiles, these connections and networking opportunities are priceless. The main thing that unites all these people is their pride in their country, culture and respect for others. This expresses the true meaning of BRICS+: freedom, openness, cultural exchange and opportunities for all. BRICS+ fashion exchanges will continue to evolve. The summit adopted a declaration on the establishment of the BRICS International Fashion Federation to enhance cultural exchanges and cooperation between professional associations. The representativeness of this new area of BRICS+ ties may well turn out to be the envy of many UN events. While the 2023 summit brought representatives from 60 countries, this year the number of participants was over one and a half times greater. Everyone will also be able to join the new Federation. This means that the most important principles of BRICS, openness and equality, will be expressed in action for all to see.

 

Ksenia Muratshina, PhD in History, Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Southeast Asia, Australia and Oceania of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook

 

https://journal-neo.su/2024/10/20/the-east-with-a-love-for-fashion-the-faces-of-the-brics-fashion-summit/

 

MEANWHILE:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5dlhcv24Ls

Serbia, Bulgaria, and Turkey are turning away from the EU and setting their sights on BRICS. Serbia’s frustration with stalled EU membership, Bulgaria's rising euroskepticism, and Turkey's search for new alliances have pushed them toward BRICS, now controlling 51% of global gas and 47% of oil. Could this mark the beginning of a new global power dynamic?

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

 

 

 Prospects for interaction

 

Prospects for interaction between the countries of the Alliance of Sahel States and BRICS    BY Mikhail Gamandiy-Egorov

 

There is little time left before the start of the 2024BRICS Summit, which will be held in our country. In addition to the serious agenda in various areas of mutual interest that the current members of the organization will be in charge of at the said summit, many observers are naturally interested by the question of the further expansion of the international structure representing multipolarity, including, of course, vis-à-vis African countries.The strengthening of the alliance between BRICS and the countries of the Global South will continue to move forward 

Pan-African values and BRICS

As of today, three African states are already full-fledged members of the BRICS bloc: South Africa (since 2011), Ethiopia and Egypt (since 2024). In general, BRICS maintains privileged relations of strategic nature with the African continent and the states of the Global South. Regardless of whether a new stage of BRICS enlargement will be announced this year in Russia, especially since the modalities of interaction between the organization and the candidate countries can vary (like within the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) with the status of dialogue partners or observers), the main thing is that the strengthening of the alliance between BRICS and the countries of the Global South will continue to move forward. This, of course, includes African states as well.

At the same time, today and more than ever, an extremely important point must be taken into account. The further expansion of BRICS should be done only with countries that fully share the organization’s agenda, including in the framework of supporting the multipolar world. This is perhaps even the key point. Ultimately, there is no point in repeating the past mistake, when Argentina was invited among the candidates for BRICS membership from Latin American states, but then a change of government followed and a clownish pro-Western president took power. Of course, Brazil had a special interest in Argentina’s membership at that time and during that period it was perfectly justified, but given the instability of the Argentine political system, it is obvious that such mistakes must not be repeated. Especially since in Latin America there are absolutely worthy candidates, such as Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua and Bolivia.

Regarding Africa, it is now obviously appropriate to give priority first to those states that conduct their policies and development paths in full compliance with Pan-African values and that are unconditional allies of the multipolar world order. There are a significant number of such countries on the African continent today and this applies particularly to the member states of the Alliance-Confederation of Sahel States (AES, Alliance-Confédération des Etats du Sahel), , composed of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger.

AES: a reliable ally of the multipolar world

Indeed, these states of the Sahel region have already proven, not only in words, but also and above all through deeds, that they are reliable and worthy allies of the powers that defend and promote the contemporary multipolar world order. In addition, one more important point should be mentioned. Already being a full-fledged regional alliance, currently composed of three states, the full integration of the AES into BRICS projects will further strengthen the processes at the international level, which are today in the interests of all the multipolar era supporters, as well as the very direction of active interaction between all international and regional structures that support the multipolar world.

Regardless of the initial status of such integration (as partner states, observers or full members), it will give a strong impetus to many other countries of the African continent to realize that this is indeed the path worth taking. Ultimately, today and more than ever, the Western planetary minority is enraged, including because of contemporary geoeconomic processes . Processes that are also taking place on the African continent, for which reason it is necessary to put an end to the neocolonial ambitions of the arrogant Western minority by using the entire economic power of BRICS and the global majority.

 

Mikhail Gamandiy-Egorov, entrepreneur, political commentator, expert on African and Middle Eastern issues, exclusively for the internet journal “New Eastern Outlook

 

https://journal-neo.su/2024/10/18/prospects-for-interaction-between-the-countries-of-the-alliance-of-sahel-states-and-brics/

 

READ FROM TOP

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

 

different order....

This week’s BRICS summit in the Russian city of Kazan will entice more countries to join the growing group, and Washington only has itself to blame, former Pentagon analyst Michael Maloof told ex-British MP George Galloway on Sunday.

Speaking on Galloway’s Mother of All Talk Shows (MOATS), Maloof applauded Russian President Vladimir Putin for recognizing that countless states around the world are seeking a more inclusive economic system and looking, in Maloof’s words, “to get out from under the odious sanctions of the West and the financial system that has really encumbered them.”

“The United States is in charge of the ‘Rules Based Order’, which means that they can not only make the rules, but break them at will, and we’ve seen this constantly in its own decision making. And the world is saying ‘we’ve seen enough of this crap,’” he told Galloway.

”We’re going to be seeing challenges to the hegemony of the dollar, [and] the weaponization of the dollar and the Western system, and we’re already seeing mechanisms that will be offered at this summit this week,” he continued.

After it was effectively excommunicated from the Western financial system over the Ukraine conflict in 2022, Russia stepped up its efforts to settle foreign trade in rubles and other currencies. “We did not refuse to settle transactions in dollars. Rather, we were refused, and were simply forced to look for other options,” Putin explained at the Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) in Vladivostok last month.

Putin noted that Russia and its BRICS partners are now using national currencies in 65% of mutual trade settlements. According to Reuters, Russia will propose a new blockchain-based international financial system at this week’s summit. While Moscow has not commented on Reuters’ report, Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov previously told RT that Moscow and other BRICS countries are working on a new cross-border payment infrastructure independent of the Western SWIFT system.

The willingness of the US and its allies to weaponize the dollar and shut rival powers out of the Western system has pushed even Washington-friendly countries like Brazil, India, and the UAE to seek alternate arrangements, Maloof said. This, coupled with the fact that sanctions have driven Russia and China into an ever-closer partnership, demonstrates that “you don’t see strategic thinking coming out of the United States anymore,” he told Galloway.

READ MORE: BRICS to discuss new global financial system – Reuters

BRICS was originally founded in 2006 by Brazil, Russia, India, and China, with South Africa joining in 2011. Ethiopia, Egypt, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates joined in January 2024. Saudi Arabia has yet to ratify its membership after being invited to join.

Russia currently chairs the group. More than 30 nations, including NATO member Türkiye, have applied to join.

https://www.rt.com/news/606044-brics-response-us-dollar/

 

READ FROM TOP

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

 

marvel EU.....

The EU doesn’t need Moscow to interfere in its democracy – it has Brussels for that
Instead of trying to pin down Russia as the main threat to democracy, perhaps the bloc’s officials should look in the mirror

 

BY Rachel Marsden

 

The EU superheroes did it, guys. They stopped Russian President Vladimir Putin from being elected to Brussels. And now they’re telling us all about how they did it, before Marvel Studios’ costume department comes knocking on the door of the EU clown tent to ask for their capes back.

The Russians and their “disinformation”didn’t have any impact on the European Elections earlier this year. That’s now the official word from the EU itself.

Vera Jourova, the Vice President of the European Commission for Values and Transparency, has emerged from an Orwellian novel to announce that “based on currently available information, no major information interference operation capable of disrupting the elections was recorded.”

So much for the public freak out that European parliamentarians were having back in April 2024, demanding even more censorship of “Kremlin-backed media outlets” and “disinformation campaigns” in what they qualified as “Kremlin-backed attempts to interfere with and undermine European democratic processes.” 

We’re supposed to believe that it’s all because Jourova had embarked on a crackdown, er, “Democracy Tour” to commiserate not just with election officials and authorities, but also with “civil society” NGOs, industry, and media. Surely it has nothing to do with the fact that there wasn’t really much disinformation to begin with and that they’ve been blowing the issue way out of proportion. 

Jourova herself acknowledged that even the EU’s Digital Media Observatory was only able to find between 4% to 8% of what they qualify as “disinformation” among all articles analyzed between May 2023 and March 2024, and that the figure climbed to just 15% in May 2024, right before the EU’s June election. 

This means that around EU election time, a whopping 85% of information and analysis floating around in the public domain was EU-approved. Jourova said that “disinformation narratives followed the topics we expected: there were allegations that the elections are rigged, but mostly topics that trigger a strong emotional impact – the war on Ukraine, the Middle East, false narratives on climate change, and migrants.” We used to call those things topics of debate. But that was before they decided that the agendas Brussels was trying to ram down everyone’s throats across the entire bloc wouldn’t be served by messy democratic dissent. Best to just dismiss, marginalize, or censor opposing information and narratives and be forced to deal with being violently mugged by reality later on issues like Ukraine’s not actually “winning,” regardless of how expensive life has become for EU citizens as a result of the bloc’s suicidal pro-Ukraine policies, and migration being an actual five-alarm problem for the EU as it faces the palpable rise of populism backlash for not doing enough earlier. 

And the EU elections are certainly not rigged! The people elect representatives to EU parliament, then a ‘president’ is handpicked behind closed doors and plopped in front of them for a simple yes/no confirmation vote. That person, currently ‘Queen’ Ursula von der Leyen, who has never actually been elected to the EU parliament, then runs a ‘royal’ European Commission of bureaucratic desk jockeys that crafts and dictates policy for the entire bloc. Anyone calling this anything other than a model democratic institution must be a Russian agent. 

A quick trip to the European Digital Media Observatory’s website, and a random click on an article, finds that it qualifies Ukrainian fake news, like the nonsense story about the ‘Ghost of Kyiv’ fighter pilot who was downing Russian jets left and right at the outset of the conflict, as “soft propaganda” necessary to rally Ukrainian troops and allies – unlike Russia’s “hard propaganda.” And what might that be, exactly? The same analysis includes an obviously satirical cartoon caricature of Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky and points out that, no, Zelensky did not actually emerge as a cartoon from a hole in the streets of Paris with paper money and gold bars flying into his mouth. They even included a photo of the actual “real” Parisian street, before someone photoshopped in the cartoon Zelensky, to prove that Russia was spreading lies. “Sometimes, it requires thinking outside of the box, using geolocation methods or contacting fact-checkers or sources on the field, such as Myth Detector in Georgia, to debunk a fabricated caricature of president Zelensky in Paris,” the intrepid EU fact-checkers say of their work in protecting Europeans from laughing their posterior off, at least until they visit the observatory’s website.

Jourova credited the Democracy Action Plan of 2020, meant to bolster by both “strengthening media freedom” and “countering disinformation.” Nothing says freedom and democracy like institutional powers deciding what information should be free and what should be censored into oblivion.

The EU is starting to resemble a casino in Las Vegas: the house always wins, regardless of who voters actually send there. And the current establishment status quo is doing everything to ensure the perpetuation of the same system, including defining censorship as necessary to save democracy and freedom as adherence to their agenda. 

Maybe if they chilled out a bit more and loosened their iron grip, then not only would dissent perhaps enable better decisions that would win voter support, but it would also take the wind out of the sails of populist parties who are surging in EU and national elections largely because voters are looking to elect people who are about as far away as possible from the establishment’s current blast radius.

A lot of good all this EU censorship and information meddling did for the establishment’s cause in actual EU voting, though, with anti-establishment parties continuing to make gains. Not quite enough to book the result entirely on Russia quite yet, as the US establishment tried to do when Donald Trump won in 2016. But watch out for what happens in future Western elections, particularly this November in the US. If establishment darling Kamala Harris wins, it’ll be yet another victory for election security. If populist favorite Trump wins, get ready for it to be Russia’s fault. Because they’re looking everywhere for meddling except in the mirror. 

https://www.rt.com/news/606027-russia-eu-brussels-election-interference/

 

READ FROM TOP

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.