politicians
Reviews of the politicians kissing babies and running governments around the world; applaud and criticize the decisions they make and their implications.
For People
For People Mr.R.Chandrasekar, In addition to his work, a visionary humanitarian and a generous philanthropist in coimbatore established the Alayam Welfare Trust in 2011 with the primary goal of assisting the impoverished and marginalised in improving their level of living and changing their way of life. The objective is to ensure that women have access to high-quality education, training, employment, and entrepreneurial opportunities in order to better the lives of children, youth, women, people with disabilities, and other marginalised populations. He has been working in public welfare for nine years, which has led him to hold several meetings and organise numerous social activities throughout the year in various districts of Tamil Nadu.
By bharathigiri4 years ago in The Swamp
What Does Vladimir Putin Really Want?
As Vladimir Putin masses military materiel and hundreds of thousands of troops along the Russian-Ukrainian frontier, the Russian leader is threatening to engulf the remainder of sovereign Ukraine, following his 2014 seizure of Crimea. The West is trying to understand the black hole at the center of the Kremlin’s opaque decision making, and it is failing miserably. Like a Matryoshka doll, the answer is hidden just beneath the surface.
By Alexander Ziperovich4 years ago in The Swamp
Lord Frost, a Brexit minister, has resigned from the Cabinet 'because to Plan B Covid measures.'
Boris Johnson’s government was thrown into panic last night as Brexit minister Lord Frost dramatically quit the cabinet. Lord Frost is said to have tendered his resignation a week ago, but was persuaded to stay until January.
By Grecu Daniel Cristian4 years ago in The Swamp
Boris Johnson is not a cuckoo in the Tory Nest
It was clear over a year ago that the Tories believe they are above the law. Despite the many failings of the Tory government and their efforts to turn the UK into an elected dictatorship they held a firm lead in the polls, aided by a stubborn refusal by the official opposition to well, OPPOSE.
By Axel P Kulit4 years ago in The Swamp
Devin Nunes, a Republican from California, is stepping down as chairman of Trump's social media committee.
Rep. Devin Nunes, a divisive Republican from the San Joaquin Valley, is stepping down from Congress to lead a social media startup founded by former President Donald Trump.
By indika sampath4 years ago in The Swamp
The Immortal Xi: What Xi Jinping's Record Third Term Means for China and the World
Xi Jinping, the president of China, is no ordinary politician. Even by the standards of authoritarian China, where leaders are worshiped and feted by a fawning body politic, Xi has broken new ground in his attempts to fashion himself along the lines of Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping, the legendary Chinese statesmen, who had a larger than life impact on China and by extension, on the world. Indeed, as the Sixth Plenum of the CCP or the Chinese Communist Party concludes today, it would mark a significant inflection point for Xi as he attempts to consolidate power and continue in office for a record third term.
By Rammohan Susarla4 years ago in The Swamp
The Infrastructure Bill and The Problem with “Politicians”
I believe that just like many Americans, I have been watching the drama in DC surrounding the current infrastructure bill and have one question, why? I know my roads are full of potholes, I know that my bridges are crumbling, I know that watermains are bursting around me, I know the power grid is old. To us its just that simple, we pay taxes and expect for government services to be maintained, but here in lies the problem. That is a narrow view of infrastructure, and this is the view that is being seen by too many elected officials in Washington. Not wanting to understand that infrastructure is so much more than just roads, water and power.
By Thomas Neal4 years ago in The Swamp
Senator Tim Scott
Senator Scott, they say representation matters. It is a slogan that has now, more than ever become more prevalent with greater meaning. However, you sometimes have to wonder who that representation is for. Back in April the State of The Union was delivered, however, was more attention paid to the Republican response to President Biden’s address that the actual address from the black community, but why is that. The simple answer, representation. In that response we saw a Black Republican Senator from a Southern Republican state represent himself as strictly a politician, maneuvering himself into position that favors his political agenda. There are many reasons why he was given the proverbial “side-eye” from the Black community when it was announced that he would give the response, because to the Black community two words that don’t go together are Black and Republican. We assumed, that before the response was even given that it would not be in line with what “we” believed. What was at issue was not his political party, but strictly his position, his stance. There was a “line in the sand” drawn, and he chose his side. With the response he assured everyone who witnessed it that partisanship won out over common sense.
By Thomas Neal4 years ago in The Swamp






