Hans Blaster
I march with Sherman
- Mar 11, 2017
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The Russians and other nations have ambassadors, embassy staff, and (registered) paid lobbyists. Sneaky, hidden lobbyists and propagandists are the violation.But what choice are people given but to violate FARA, if FARA is made unavailable to them via sanctions?
Is the expectation that all pro-Russian viewpoints be suppressed entirely?
"You have to register if you want to espouse this viewpoint"
"But you can't register if you're operating in a country where this viewpoint is more prevalent"
How is that not suppressing speech? (which, by the DOJ's own guidelines, FARA isn't supposed to be doing)
This is about Russian election interference, not partisan whataboutism.You probably should be interested in that...because it explains a lot of things.
If there was a facet or aspect of a debate that explained why half the country, overnight, went from an near-absolutist "non-interventionism" position to a "we'd be on board with cutting a blank check for Country A to fight against Country B" position, I'd be curious as to why.
I've heard certain members of the left argue against sending weapons and aid into other foreign conflicts, for reasons far less compelling than the ones surrounding this conflict.
Or as the Russians call him: РОН ПОЛWhen a group goes from "Ron Paul" to "Lindsey Graham", overnight, on the topic of interventionism, we should all be curious as to why such a radical transformation happened.
"Fun" fact. The Russians charged yesterday with violating sanctions were Dimitri Simes and his wife. Simes was a foreign policy advisor to the 2016 Rand Paul presidential campaign.
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