Comments by "LRRPFco52" (@LRRPFco52) on "Fox News"
channel.
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@joewright9879 According to an assessment collated by the U.S. Defence Intelligence Agency in documents titled: "Russia/Ukraine - Assessed Combat Sustainability and Attrition.", Russia has suffered 189,500-223,000 total casualties, including 35,500-43,000 killed in action and 154,000-180,000 wounded.
Ukraine has suffered 124,500-131,000 total casualties, including 15,500-17,500 killed in action and 109,000-113,500 wounded in action.
The Russian tweet shows the doctored numbers. They didn’t even do a good job of it, as you can see the bad type font and misalignment. But just look at the claims. Russia says they have 7:1 KIA ratio, but lost half of the Donbas. Their verified loss of 6004 vehicles at the time of the documents was changed to only 600 vehicles.
They transplanted Ukraine’s KIA figures as guessed by DIA, over as their own, then made up Ukrainian KIA stats at over 71,000. None of this was in the documents.
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Hillary has been receiving money from hostile foreign governments dating back to the 1980s.
When Bill was Governor of Arkansas, they had one of the senior Rose Law Firm partners fly to Switzerland 12-20x per year dropping classified materials from the NSA in safe deposit boxes in a bank in Chiasso. In return, millions of dollars were accumulated in 3 accounts at that bank for Bill, Hillary, and their close attorney friend.
This was still going on during the first 6 months of the Clinton Presidency in 1993.
The NSA and FBI had this attorney under surveillance, and seized the money from all 3 accounts in early July, 1993.
This attorney was the Deputy WH Counsel by then, and was indicted for espionage.
On July 19, 1993, Clinton fired the FBI Director (who refused to halt this and 13 other investigations into the Clintons). The following day, the body of the indicted attorney was found in a DC area park on the Virginia side.
His name was Vince Foster....
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@hansdampf232 I've experienced healthcare in Europe from Germany to Finland dating back from 1980-present, with family members in Finland and Sweden. One of them had to go to Spain to get a new procedure that was pioneered in the US.
Finland's government just resigned because they can't fund the NHS and elderly care, primarily because they have aborted their children and don't have enough workers to tax in order to take care of the elderly.
Finland also audited their NHS in the 1990s and determined that patient care was the least priority in the NHS in practice, especially the elderly. When my son crashed his bike and needed care, we waited almost 2 months before he could get an MRI, and children have priority there.
When I had my stroke here in the US in 2016, I had an MRI within 4 hours, after I had EKG, Echogram, and CT scan. They were on me like white on rice, found the blood vessels on MRI. Thankfully, no signs of permanent injury, partly because they caught it so quickly and administered the treatments that help prevent further clotting.
I'm in the fairly unique position where I have lived extensively in 8 different States in the US across 6 different regions including:
* Southwest/SoCal
* Southeast
* NoVA area/DC
* Northeast
* Mountain Central
* Pacific Northwest
I've also lived in several nations in Western Europe and Scandinavia, and was an exchange student in Japan.
Coming from a US perspective, when receiving healthcare or any government interaction in the other nations, I've always had this feeling that there is an element of humanity missing that we have in the US. It's more intangible, but noticeable to me. That included West Germany when I was a kid and was hospitalized after an ice skating accident with my school field trip.
I have citizenship in the US and EU, but choosing to live in the US is such an easy decision overall. Not all agree, but there are way more cons than pros in Europe. You pay more for less, including healthcare, which is deducted from your income. It certainly isn't free. I have also received bills for treatment and medical devices in Finland, through they weren't that high.
Better costs more. I think that's the principle a lot of people overlook. Whether we're looking at emergency medicine, internal medicine, orthopedics, pediatrics, dentistry, or optometry, our choices are so much more vast in the US than any of the European nations, even when you compare healthcare infrastructure of the poorer Deep South in the US to metropolitan areas of Scandinavia.
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