Saturday 12 November 2022

How Ukrainians Survive Winter Under Russian attack: Chop Wood

 

War-weary Ukraine residents chop wood to ‘survive’ winter

The few remaining residents in Siversk are preparing for a cold winter
AFP

In the eastern Ukrainian town of Siversk, Valery drives a chainsaw through a tree trunk, like many others in the war-ravaged region stocking up for a cold winter.

“We try to survive thanks to wood,” says the 39-year-old, who stayed behind to look after his mother after his wife and children fled to the capital.

“A basement (to hide from Russian strikes), a stove and wood — that’s all we have,” he says, not giving his surname.

Russian forces who invaded Ukraine in February pounded the district with missiles and rockets this summer, and unsuccessfully tried several times to capture it.

Though the town has so far held out, its heights and eastern flank have been disfigured by the strikes, and deep craters have been etched in the earth.

In one square, buildings including a school has been severely damaged.

Only a handful of the town’s pre-war 12,000 residents remain today, battling life without gas or electricity.

“There’s nothing else to do, so we chop down the trees as much as possible. There are lots here, so it should be enough” for the winter, Valery says.

Wine before bed

The front line lies in a semi-circle, some 10 to 15 kilometres (6 to 9 miles) to the east of the town.

The constant to and fro of artillery fire between Ukrainian and Russian forces resounds throughout near-abandoned town.

“The only way to get through it is to drink wine before sleeping,” Valery says.

“I’m stressed, it’s difficult to cope.”

Alla, a 68-year-old doctor who also stayed behind, says she helps distribute humanitarian aid from the local authorities and church when it arrives.

“There are also volunteers who bring in food for the animals” left behind to roam the town, she says.

The physician says the fighting has destroyed her flat and one of her two houses in Siversk.

She has moved all the firewood from the destroyed house to the surviving one where she lives with her husband.

Suddenly, a blast makes her jump.

“There goes the Vasilek,” she says, as Ukrainian soldiers fire their Soviet 2B9 Vasilek mortar gun in the direction of Russian positions.

“It’s hard to get used to all this firing,” she says.

“But it’s our choice. We stayed here, so we’re trying to deal with it.”

No phone signal

The main problem, she says, is the lack of communication with the outside world.

“We don’t have a telephone signal. We did before, but not anymore. It’s hard to reach someone,” she says.

With no power in the area, residents have had to adapt to daylight hours, which end at around 5:00 pm.

“It gets dark early so we go to bed early. And we wake up early. That’s how we live,” she says.

In the town’s heights, Volodymyr, Victoria and Mykola chat at the bottom of the building where they live.

Axe in hand, Volodymyr is dicing up log for an outside oven.

“We chop up wood, put it in the oven and cook the buckwheat,” he says, adding it’s warmer outside near the stove than inside his unheated flat.

Sitting on a bench in a woolly blue hat and with her hands stuffed into her jacket pockets, Victoria grumbles.

“I live next door and we were put on the list to receive wood. They (the local authorities) took our names three months ago, but still we haven’t received anything,” she says.

“So we decided to find some ourselves.”

At least they receive some humanitarian donations.

“Without them, it would be difficult,” she says.

Friday 11 November 2022

The Only Good Official in the Brandon Administration is being forced out by the Commies

 

Biden's border chief 'told to resign or be fired' after being falsely accused and slandered by misleading leaks to MSM by administration commies

  • Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Chris Magnus is in the firing line
  • He released statement that DHS Secretary Mayorkas has told him to step down 
  • If he doesn't, the Biden administration has threatened to fire him
  • Magnus has insisted he will not leave the post and is committed to the agency 
A top border official said on Friday he had been asked to resign or be fired amid tension in the Biden administration with the commies.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Commissioner Chris Magnus said in a statement to the Los Angeles Times and the Washington Post that he had been asked to step down by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas or be removed from the role. 

Magnus said he would not resign and defended his commitment to the agency.

The White House, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and CBP did not respond to requests for comment.

Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Commissioner Chris Magnus says he has been asked to resign of be fired by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas

Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Commissioner Chris Magnus says he has been asked to resign of be fired by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas 

Magnus, 62, was confirmed in December as commissioner of the CBP, a 60,000-person agency that oversees border security, trade and travel. 

Magnus worked for police departments in Michigan, North Dakota and California before becoming the police chief in Tucson, Arizona, in 2016. 

Magnus defended his tenure, saying in a statement: 'I've always been someone who aggressively questions the status quo, looks for ways to do things better, and engages directly with the public and workforce.'

'In any organization, some people are threatened by this. They don't like it when someone questions 'why' certain things must be done the way they've always been done. I'm not here to back down to the predictable challenges from those people,' he noted.

Other federal agencies and officials are to blame, of course, for the high number of border crossings. Magnus is trying to deal with the situation as best he can, which is why the real culprits are trying to force him out. They made a mistake in hiring him, not realizing that he was a good, honest, and effective person. I know because he was police chief in my former city, where he did a superb job.

Cows are getting high feeding on Hemp: Cannabinoids are also transferred to their milk

 

Cows are getting HIGH off industrial hemp: Animals given feed containing cannabinoids show increased yawning, salivation and unsteady movements, study finds

  • Cows show signs of intoxication after eating feed with industrial hemp
  • This includes an increase in yawning, salivation and unsteady movements
  • A significant concentration of cannabinoids is also transferred to their milk
  • Some samples showed levels that could impact human health 

Our cows could be enjoying more than one type of grass, as a new study has found that they are getting high from cannabinoids in their feed.

Industrial hemp silage is a common ingredient in animal feed, and can contain a high concentration of psychoactive compounds.

Cattle that enjoy just 1.85 lbs (0.84 kg) of cannabinoid-rich hemp show increased yawning, salivation and unsteady movements - all potential indicators of intoxication.

The compounds could also be transferred into the milk they produce, with some samples showing levels that could impact human health.

The researchers, from the German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment, wrote: 'Our study shows that feeding cannabinoid-rich industrial hemp silage made from leaves, flowers and seeds leads to a decrease in feed intake and milk yield in dairy cows.

'A transfer of cannabinoids into foods of animal origin is conceivable when by-products of hemp production and the whole plant are used as feedstuffs.' 

The researchers initially adapted their ten lactating Holstein Friesian dairy cows to new food by replacing up to 0.92 kg of their corn silage with low-THC industrial hemp silage (stock image)

The researchers initially adapted their ten lactating Holstein Friesian dairy cows to new food by replacing up to 0.92 kg of their corn silage with low-THC industrial hemp silage.

The compounds could also be transferred into the milk they produce, as some samples taken showed levels that could impact human health. 

Hemp (pictured) contains cannabinoids, some of which, like tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and its derivatives, can induce a psychoactive effect on animals and humans alike (stock image)

Hemp (pictured) contains cannabinoids, some of which, like tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and its derivatives, can induce a psychoactive effect on animals and humans alike

Hemp contains cannabinoids, some of which, like tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and its derivatives, can induce a psychoactive effect on animals and humans alike.

For the study, published today in Nature Food, the researchers aimed to determine if industrial hemp silage had an effect on dairy cows.

They also wanted to quantify how much, if any, was being transferred into the milk and whether it would pose a risk to consumer health.


Darwin's Dumbest Criminals Award: Calls 911 on Himself, Loses 3 Billion

 

Cops find device holding $3 BILLION in stolen Bitcoin stashed in a POPCORN TIN after 10-year investigation: Man, 32, is arrested for hacking 50,000 cryptocurrency from dark web after calling 911 on himself

  • James Zhong, 32, of Gainesville, Georgia, pleaded guilty to wire fraud for the theft of $3.36 billion in Bitcoin from Silk Road dark web internet marketplace
  • The U.S. Department of Justice announced that the stolen Bitcoin was found stashed in a popcorn tin hidden in Zhong's home in November 2021 
  • It's the Justice Department's second-largest seizure of cryptocurrency
  • Zhong is scheduled to be sentenced on February 22, 2023

Georgia man faces up to 20 years in prison after more than $3 billion in stolen Bitcoin was found stashed in a popcorn tin at his home in what authorities call the second largest seizure of cryptocurrency.

James Zhong, 32, pleaded guilty on Friday to stealing the Bitcoin a decade ago from the illegal Silk Road marketplace, which the FBI shut down in 2013.

The U.S. Department of Justice announced this week that authorities raided Zhong's Gainesville home in November 2021 where they found 50,676 Bitcoin with a value of $3.36 billion at the time. 

The raid resulted in the second-largest seizure of cryptocurrency, following the $3.6 billion in stolen crypto linked to the 2016 hack of crypto exchange Bitfinex, but cryptocurrency has since dropped in value. 

Bitcoin hit a two-year low of $15,632. Ether, the next largest cryptocurrency, extended losses on Wednesday to hit its lowest since July. 

Zhong pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. He is scheduled to be sentenced on February 22, 2023. 

James Zhong, 32, of Gainesville, Georgia, pleaded guilty to wire fraud for the theft of $3.36 billion in Bitcoin stolen from the Silk Road dark web internet marketplace back in 2012

James Zhong, 32, of Gainesville, Georgia, pleaded guilty to wire fraud for the theft of $3.36 billion in Bitcoin stolen from the Silk Road dark web internet marketplace back in 2012

Authorities found the stolen Bitcoin  and cash hidden in a 'single board computer' that was stashed inside a popcorn tin and stored in a bathroom closet at Zhong's home

Authorities found the stolen Bitcoin  and cash hidden in a 'single board computer' that was stashed inside a popcorn tin and stored in a bathroom closet at Zhong's home

Lt. Shaun Barnett of the Athens, Georgia police department told media outlet Protos that Zhong called the police in 2019 to 'report a burglary.' 

Zhong was living in Athens, Georgia in 2019 when he called police and reported that he had many assets stolen, including 'a lot of bitcoin,' which was apparently grabbed the attention of the IRS Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) unit.

The cash was never recovered, nor was a suspect identified, but the burglary and amount of money reported stolen 'raised a red flag with the IRS,' Barnett said. 

Following an investigation, a search warrant was served and the IRS-CI and Athens police department made an arrest in November of 2021. 

Federal officials say the stolen Bitcoin was found when they served the search warrant at Zhong's Georgia home, solving a decade-long mystery. 

The digital tokens were hidden in a 'single board computer' that was stashed inside a popcorn tin and stored in a bathroom close of Zhong's home. 

Authorities also seized $662,000 in cash, physical Bitcoin coins, an 80 percent interest in a Memphis-based real estate investment company with substantial holdings, along with 11 1-ounce bars of silver and gold.

'James Zhong committed wire fraud over a decade ago when he stole approximately 50,000 Bitcoin from Silk Road,' U.S. attorney Damian Williams said in a statement this week. 

'For almost 10 years, the whereabouts of this massive chunk of missing Bitcoin had ballooned into an over $3.3 billion mystery. Thanks to state-of-the-art cryptocurrency tracing and good old-fashioned police work, law enforcement located and recovered this impressive cache of crime proceeds.'

Prosecutors said Zhong executed a scheme to defraud 'Silk Road' dark web marketplace. They said he made nine accounts September 2012 and would then flood the site with withdrawal requests, which tricked the site into giving him multiples of what he had deposited.

After doing this 140 times, he had withdrawn all of the site's cryptocurrency holdings. He then transferred the Bitcoin into separate accounts to keep it from being detected.

Authorities seized $662,000 in cash, physical Bitcoin, 80 percent interest in a Memphis-based real estate investment company with substantial holdings, and silver and gold-colored bars

Authorities seized $662,000 in cash, physical Bitcoin, 80 percent interest in a Memphis-based real estate investment company with substantial holdings, and silver and gold-colored bars

Silk Road is an online black market used to distribute illegal drugs and goods to buyers, according to the U.S. Attorney. 

'Mr. Zhong executed a sophisticated scheme designed to steal bitcoin from the notorious Silk Road Marketplace,' Special Agent in Charge Tyler Hatcher said.

'Once he was successful in his heist, he attempted to hide his spoils through a series of complex transactions which he hoped would be enhanced as he hid behind the mystery of the darknet.'

Beginning in March 2022, Zhong began voluntarily surrendering to the government additional Bitcoin that he had access to and had not dissipated. In total, he voluntarily surrendered 1,004 additional Bitcoin.