Mother and Son Bury Man in Backyard Grave

In a tragic culmination of events, police in Conover, North Carolina, uncovered the body of 54-year-old Richard Morris in a shallow grave in the backyard of Robert Vaughn Pippin and his mother, Emily Shook Pippin, in September of 2022.

Peering mere inches beneath the soil, investigators discovered Morris’ body, and later in October of the same year, Robert Pippin admitted to WSOC that Morris had overdosed in his basement and that he had since buried the man in the backyard, going so far as to also withdraw Morris’ disability payments.

The Conover Police Department (CPD) have since arrested Robert and Emily Pippin, serving their indictments to them last Friday on charges of felony concealment or failure to report a death.

The arrests came following the CPD receiving an autopsy report from the North Carolina State Medical Examiner’s Office in April that revealed Methamphetamine toxicity as the cause of death.

Having posted the $10,000 and $1,000 secured bonds, respectively, Robert and Emily Pippin have since been released from custody and appeared in court on Monday.

The incident has left those who knew Morris deeply saddened, including Angelica Hall, a friend of the deceased, who expressed her confusion over why Pippin did not contact anyone about Morris’ death after it occurred, referring to him as a “good man” and someone you can rely on.

Though an indictment may bring some closure to members of Morris’ community, the sorrow of his passing will linger.

A Leak and Its Significance

A major international story took an unexpected turn as Air National Guardsman Jack Teixeira was taken into custody for allegedly leaking dozens of classified intelligence documents, many related to Russia’s war in Ukraine. The leak had had a global impact, irritated American allies and, according to USA Today, left “[t]he Department of Defense […] in full damage-control mode.” But what does this fiasco mean for the war?

Public reactions to the leak were mixed, with Ukraine’s government and intellectuals, as usual, far more optimistic than most Western media. In National Review, for instance, Jim Geraghty was unusually dour: “Biden’s rhetoric regarding Ukrainian resistance […] appears to be wildly overoptimistic happy talk,” he remarked, citing the intelligence documents’ depiction of a Ukrainian military facing numerous challenges; the Washington Post described Ukraine’s “challenges in massing troops, ammunition and equipment.” According to the secret papers, Geraghty commented, “Ukraine’s abilities in the spring offensive [were]  modest or grim.” This typical Western gloominess could scarcely have been farther from the unperturbed Ukrainian responses. Kyrylo Budanov, the beleaguered nation’s intelligence chief, claimed to “know” that his country would win the war in the “very nearest future” and that the leak would “not be able to affect the real results of the [spring counteroffensive].” Oleksiy Arestovych, the celebrity former presidential advisor, struck a similar tone.

Whether the pessimists or the optimists are more right is hard to say, but there are a few points that tilt the scale in the latter’s favor. Firstly, it seems likely that the intelligence assessments concerning the prospects of Ukraine’s planned spring offensive were biased toward visions of doom and gloom. For one thing, as noted in VOA News, the documents estimate “Russian fatalities” at “35,500 to 43,500,” whereas there exist “plausible estimates of up to 200,000 [Russians] killed, wounded or missing by numerous analysts.” In February, the Center for Strategic and International Studies reported “approximately 60,000 to 70,000 Russian combat fatalities.” Ergo, the exposed analyses seem to be based on highly conservative figures.

Such caution is hardly surprising given intelligence agencies’ perennial penchant for pessimism. In commentary published on the Rand Corporation’s blog, James Dobbins called this “the natural tendency of intelligence analysts to accentuate the downside of any risk.” This propensity, in his view, arises because the repercussions from underestimating a threat are generally greater than those from overestimating one. A similar statement of the intelligence community’s built-in biases occurs in a recently popular exposé by Jacob Siegel.

Moreover, according to Dobbins, “[t]he intelligence community’s natural tendency to stress the downside of any risk is in most instances offset by the policy maker’s penchant for emphasizing the upside.” Such context provides a helpful corrective to Geraghty’s belief that Joe Biden’s positive spins on the situation around Ukraine are grave distortions of the more accurate picture revealed by the leak. Incidentally, retired Lieutenant Colonel Robert Maginnis went even further, asking in Fox News whether Joe Biden was “lying to the American people” and, more fancifully: “Are American troops fighting Russians? Is the Biden administration purposely draining our weapons arsenals to favor the Chinese?”

The history of this Russo-Ukrainian war clearly shows a tendency on the secret services’ part to err on the side of caution. Consider the start of the full invasion last year. As the Associated Press reported soon after, senior “intelligence officials [had] admitted [to having] underestimated Ukraine’s ability to defend itself,” although they had also “accurately predict[ed] Russian President Vladimir Putin’s intention to launch a war.” This looks consistent with a bias towards negatives: the danger of an invasion was accurately detected, whereas the danger that the defenders would fail was exaggerated. Likewise, neither the United States nor Ukraine anticipated the stunning reconquests the latter would achieve in its offensive around Kharkiv.

All this is to say that the trope of the unwinnable war against Russia, reflected in Maginnis’ query whether Ukraine can “really win the war against giant Russia,” remains a myth. It must not, however, be concluded that Ukraine’s backers should not provide more weapons. Even if they have been blown out of proportion, the concerns raised in those classified communications ought to be taken seriously. This is especially true given that Western countries are restrained by unreasonable timidity in their opposition to Russian aggression – “self-deterring,” as an article from the Atlantic Council puts it.

Some observers have worried that the release of classified information itself plays into the Kremlin’s hand, allowing the Russians to anticipate Ukrainian moves. Thus, CNN heard from one “Five Eyes nation official [who] expressed concern about the leaked Ukraine war information handicapping the country on the battlefield.” “The disclosure complicates Ukraine’s spring offensive,” a piece in the Wall Street Journal maintains.

As mentioned, Budanov and Arestovych have both denied the possibility of the leak having any substantial influence on the course of the counteroffensive. Again, there are some reassuring details. For instance, another takeaway from the classified materials is that the United States can monitor Russian actions very closely. As the explainer in CNN notes, “US penetration of Russia’s Defense Ministry and the mercenary organization Wagner Group goes deeper than previously understood,” giving the United States knowledge of “which exact thermoelectric power plants, electric substations and railroad and vehicle bridges Russian forces planned to attack inside Ukraine and when.” If the United States possesses this level of insight into the Russian side’s decisions, it seems likely that any actions the Russians take to account for information exposed by the leak will themselves become known to Ukraine and can be taken into consideration in its planning. After all, the Ukrainians do not have a binding deadline for their offensive, and can delay it if need be. Furthermore, as explained in Fox News, “Putin’s defensive fortifications, much like the French Maginot Line of World War II, are static, vulnerable to interdiction of supply lines, and can be bypassed.” If the way in which the Russians prepare for Ukrainian attacks is inherently deficient, having greater knowledge of what Ukraine may do next may provide only a superficial advantage.

Meanwhile, possibly the worst take on the whole affair came from Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene. Misspelling Jack Teixeira’s name, the lawmaker implied the government was persecuting him for being “white, male, christian, and antiwar.” Needless to say, Teixeira’s actions, if the allegations are true, had been unchristian from start to finish. Aside from being fundamentally dishonest, such a betrayal of the United States by a serviceman is a clear failure to “render unto Caesar.” It showed no trace of the patriotism that the Christian religion teaches. It even resulted from the sin of pride, not from idealistic motives: as the Associated Press has affirmed, the breach of security seems to have been “motivated more by bravado than ideology.” Indeed, the leak violated an even older dictum, delivered at the dawn of Western Civilization by Heraclitus of Ephesus: “The people should fight for their law as for their city wall.”

The post A Leak and Its Significance appeared first on Providence.

Canada Must Condemn Israel’s Assassination of Palestinians and Their Families in Gaza

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‘Unpardonable bias’: Congresswoman calls for firing UN official over Israel ‘war crimes’ comments

“Albanese should be fired and the utterly unfair, one-sided Commission of Inquiry disbanded.”

By Andrew Bernard, Algemeiner

Congresswoman Ann Wagner (R-MO) has called for the firing of Francesca Albanese, the UN’s special rapporteur for Palestine, following Albanese’s most recent comments accusing Israel of “war crimes.”

“Special Rapporteur Albanese’s comments demonstrate yet again her unpardonable bias against the state of Israel and the Jewish people,” Wagner told The Algemeiner. “Albanese should be fired and the utterly unfair, one-sided Commission of Inquiry disbanded. The United Nations must eliminate this deep-seated anti-Semitism and anti-Israel bias and commit itself to supporting the peaceful coexistence of Israel and a democratic, terrorism-free Palestine.”

Albanese on 3 May co-issued a press release through the UN’s human rights office in response to the death of Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) member Khader Adnan in a hunger strike.

The press release quotes Albanese fellow UN rapporteur Tlaleng Mofokeng as saying that Israeli administrative detention is “tantamount to a war crime,” and called Adnan’s death “a tragic testament to Israel’s cruel and inhumane detention policy and practices.”

“We cannot separate Israel’s carceral policies from the colonial nature of its occupation, intended to control and subjugate all Palestinians in the territory Israel wants to control,” Albanese and her fellow expert said. “How many more lives will have to be lost, before an inch of justice can be delivered in the occupied Palestinian territory?”

The press release does not mention Adnan’s membership in PIJ. Adnan was indicted and arrested by an Israeli military court in February.

Albanese, who was appointed in May 2022, has repeatedly drawn criticism for anti-Israel bias and for comments that critics allege are antisemitic.

Albanese has routinely described Israel as an “apartheid regime” and in August 2022 asserted that indiscriminate rocket fire from Gaza was part of a Palestinian “right to resist.” Before assuming office, Albanese had written in 2014 that the United States was “subjugated by the Jewish lobby.” Albanese has distanced herself from those remarks, saying that she would not repeat them and that “people make mistakes.”

“I am not antisemite [sic],” Albanese said in an April 2022 interview. “I never said Jews are Nazis, and I certainly never implied that I can’t carry out my responsibility objectively and professionally.”

Wagner in February co-led a letter with Rep. Brad Schneider (D-IL) that called for Albanese’s firing for her past comments and for describing Israel as a “colonial” “apartheid regime.”

“Ms. Albanese has repeatedly refused to condemn terrorist attacks against Israelis while continuing her condemnations of Israel,” the letter said. “Her inexcusable silence against terrorism targeting Israelis and her outrageous and prejudicial remarks clearly reflect the irredeemable bias of her mandate.”

Wagner told The Algemeiner on Friday that she further took issue with Albanese’s description of Israel as carrying out a “colonial” occupation.

“Israel has a fundamental right to exist,” she said. “The Jewish people are not colonizers—period. To suggest otherwise is both anti-Semitic and flagrantly wrong.”

Adnan was a senior member and spokesman for PIJ, who was described by the group in a statement following his death as “Commander Khader Adnan,” a “martyr,” and a “brave leader.” Adnan was most recently arrested on Feb. 23 and began an 87-day hunger strike that resulted in his death at the age of 45.

While PIJ mourned his death as a leader and martyr for the organization, some NGOs played down that aspect of his career.

“Khader Adnan, a baker by trade, had nine children with his wife Randa, who tirelessly campaigned for his release,” wrote Amnesty International in a statement after his death. “Since 2004 he had been arrested 13 times by Israeli authorities, due to his affiliation with the political wing of Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) movement. While PIJ’s armed wing has carried out attacks on Israeli civilians, Khader Adnan himself was never charged with any involvement in acts of violence.”

Adnan had previously been recorded speaking publicly in support of PIJ, which is designated as a terrorist organization without distinction between its “political” and “armed” “wings” by the US, the European Union, and others, calling on attendees at a 2007 rally to give their lives in the struggle against Israel.

“Who among you is the next suicide bomber?” Adnan asked. “Who among you will carry the next explosive belt? Who among you will fire the next bullets? Who among you will have his own body parts blown all over?”

PIJ responded to Adnan’s death by firing rockets from the Gaza strip into Israel. Israeli military operations against PIJ in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip remain ongoing.

The post ‘Unpardonable bias’: Congresswoman calls for firing UN official over Israel ‘war crimes’ comments appeared first on World Israel News.

Ukraine War: Biden Displays Frighteningly Poor Leadership. Lies and More Lies

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Video: The Vaccine Industry crimes and killing started long before covid. Ted Kuntz

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Biden Nukes Korea, Builds Anti-China Alliances

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Zelensky Angers Russia with Plan to Change Date of Victory in Europe Day

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The Federal Reserve Cartel: The Solution

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Widow Shockingly Charged for Murdering Husband After Writing Grief Book for Children

Kouri Richins, a 33-year-old mother of three from Utah, has been charged with the murder of her husband, Eric Richins. On March 4, 2022, police arrived at the couple’s home in Kamas to find Eric lying at the foot of the bed, having been declared deceased. An autopsy revealed that Eric had died of an oral overdose of fentanyl, five times the lethal dosage.

Eric’s death prompted an investigation that uncovered a troubling history of Kouri’s attempts to poison her husband and more evidence indicating her involvement in his death. Phone records, testimony from an unnamed acquaintance, and her statements to the police were all factors that led to her arrest.

Several years before his death, Eric had expressed to one of his two sisters that he believed his wife had tried to kill him. Eric had also held a joint life insurance policy which his wife had unsuccessfully attempted to add herself as the sole beneficiary in January 2022. Afterward, Eric removed her from his will and replaced her with his sister, believing Kouri would “kill him for the money.”

On Valentine’s Day 2022, Eric “became very ill” and told a friend he believed Kouri was trying to poison him. This illness was followed by Kouri’s alleged attempts to acquire pain medication for an “investor” from an acquaintance, with whom she requested “some of the Michael Jackson stuff,” which specifically turned out to be fentanyl.

The day after Eric’s death, Kouri closed on a $2 million home that she wanted to flip and subsequently threw a large celebratory party during which she allegedly “assaulted” one of Eric’s sisters that had shown up.

Kouri later wrote a picture book, “Are You With Me?” to help kids cope with the death of a loved one – dedicated “to her amazing husband and a wonderful father.”