Caleb Maupin responds to Biden’s “killer” remark (plus much more)

HELP ENLIGHTEN YOUR FELLOWS. BE SURE TO PASS THIS ON. SURVIVAL DEPENDS ON IT.


Caleb Maupin


EDITED BY PATRICE GREANVILLE
Dispatch dateline: Sunday 21 March 2021 / In 2 parts


An informal chat with Caleb Maupin as your guide to the multitude of news, lies, distortions, rumors, idiocies, hypocrisies, and ideologies that shape our world.

Caleb argues that Biden's [recent] gratuitous insult (Putin is a "killer") was simply a staged event to erase Trump's admission that the US, too, has engaged in pretty sordid and criminal acts. (see appendix).



Appendix
In an interview with Bill O'Reilly, when the big blowhard says "Putin' s a killer" expecting only an enthusiastic confirmation, Trump pushes back saying "we're not so innocent." O'Reilly is simply flabbergasted. 


Feb 6, 2017 

In an interview with Bill O'Reilly, President Trump says he respects Russian President Putin. O'Reilly called Putin a killer and Trump responded by saying "our country's not so innocent." 


Caleb Maupin has worked as a journalist and political analyst for the last five years. He has reported from across the United States, as well as from Iran, the Gulf of Aden and Venezuela. He has been a featured speaker at many Universities, and at international conferences held in Tehran, Quito, and Brasilia. His writings have been translated and published in many languages including Farsi, Chinese, Russian, Arabic, Spanish, and Portuguese. He is originally from Ohio. As a reporter with RT.com, Maupin's focus has been the United States. He has had many intense interactions with US State Department spokespeople including John Kirby, Mark Toner, and Heather Nauert confronting them about diverse issues like Syria, Russia, and the existence of Israeli nuclear weapons. Maupin was the primary US correspondent for RT’s international broadcasts during the 2016 Presidential elections. He reported from both the Republican and Democratic National Conventions, and also directly from the riots in Oakland, California, during the aftermath of the vote.  

 

Rev. 11.11.20

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