What is the migrant caravan and why is it dominating the US midterm elections?
-------------------------------------------
Illegal Invaders Just Got Massive Gift To Help Them Get To US – Who Paid For This?! - Duration: 2:39.This is quite disturbing.
Thankfully we have a President who will protect the border.
Remember this when voting this election.
From The Gateway Pundit:
FOX News reporter Griff Jenkins is traveling with one of the illegal immigrant caravans
on its way to the US.
Caravan Organizers are seen loading illegal immigrants on buses to take them to their
next stop on their way to the United States.
There are currently FOUR DIFFERENT CARAVANS working their way to the southern US border
through Central America and Mexico.
Meanwhile, as we previously reported, these so-called "migrants" are not actually
"refugees" as the left likes to call them since they are refusing multiple residential
settlement options.
So what's their real motive here?
Denver 7 News is now reporting that members of the soon to be illegal alien caravan have
rejected an offer from Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto to settle in Mexico.
The thousands of illegal aliens within the group have instead decided to continue their
trip towards the United States which is very interesting since Peña Nieto's offer would
actually put the migrants into two Mexican states.
Where they would be offered temporary work permits, medical care, shelter, and even schooling.
But not welfare!
Here is more via The AP:
"Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto has announced what he called the "You are at
home" plan, offering shelter, medical attention, schooling and jobs to Central Americans in
Chiapas and Oaxaca states if migrants apply, calling it a first step toward permanent refugee
status.
Authorities said more than 1,700 had already applied for refugee status.
But a standoff unfolded as federal police officers blocked the highway, saying there
was an operation underway to stop the caravan.
Thousands of migrants waited to advance, vowing to continue their long trek toward the U.S.
border.
At a meeting brokered by Mexico's National Human Rights Commission, police said they
would reopen the highway and only wanted an opportunity for federal authorities to explain
the proposal to migrants who had rejected it the previous evening.
Migrants countered that the middle of a highway was no place to negotiate and said they wanted
to at least arrive safely to Mexico City to discuss the topic with authorities and Mexican
lawmakers
They agreed to relay information back to their respective sides and said they would reconvene.
-------------------------------------------
Lawyer: States approval required for Constitutional change - Duration: 3:41. For more infomation >> Lawyer: States approval required for Constitutional change - Duration: 3:41.-------------------------------------------
UNITED STATES vs INDIA - Military Power Comparison (2018) - Duration: 3:54. For more infomation >> UNITED STATES vs INDIA - Military Power Comparison (2018) - Duration: 3:54.-------------------------------------------
Who gets to be a U.S. citizen? - Duration: 2:06. For more infomation >> Who gets to be a U.S. citizen? - Duration: 2:06.-------------------------------------------
QAnon Reveals Vatican Rothschild Reptilian Connection Behind The Deep State - Duration: 9:22.Reptilian extraterrestrials in a recent series of posts the anonymous
whistleblower group Q ANON made an important connection between the Vatican
Rothschild family and reptilian symbolism many followers of Q Anon to
fall into the camp of Christian Patriots perceive the connection as exposing
another world lay satanic influence over the Vatican their auth and other forces
making up the deep state closer analysis however suggests that what Q Anon is
really referring to by the symbolism is a very physical this worldly influence
over the deep state reptilian extraterrestrials to begin with I need
to point out what has become very clear to those closely following the Q Anon
posts which first appeared on October 28th 2017 Q Anon represents several
military intelligence officials who are leaking sensitive information and a
cryptic and coded Man or due to the pervasive influence of the deep state
over many institutions of political financial and cultural power Q Anon
close relationship with President Donald Trump has been demonstrated in various
public ways this has signaled he supports the Q Anon revelations and is
very familiar with who is really behind the deep state attempting to sabotage
his presidency in regard to deep state efforts to sabotage the Trump presidency
I highly recommend reading dr. Jerome courses book killing the deep state we
are now ready to take a closer look at what Q Anon is saying about the Vatican
Rothschilds and the reptilian connection on April 3rd Q Anon made the following
post where he attached an image posted by another anonymous source asking the
question if Satanists took over the Vatican would you notice so does the
symbolism and that Paul the sixth audience Hall really shown reptilian
control over the Vatican Canon helps answer such a question by his response
to the posted image symbolism will be their downfall money power influenced by
emphasizing symbolism Q Anon is saying that we need to closely
examine the reptilian imagery in the picture in order to really understand
who controls the Vatican Canadians - money power influence points to a nexus
of actors that underscore control of the Vatican this is where another canon post
becomes helpful in understanding this nexus of actors he pointed out that the
Vatican Bank Institute for the works of religion is at the fulcrum point of its
financial influence through its shady relationship with the CI a clown
connection indeed this close relationship between the
Vatican and the CIA gave rise to operation Gladio that was targeted
against left-wing organizations that threatened to tear Italy away from NATO
towards a closer relationship with the Soviet Union to understand the Vatican's
role in operation Gladio I highly recommend Paul Williams book Operation
Gladio the unholy alliance between the Vatican the c.i.a and the Mafia
however Koons most intriguing reference was to the 1832 Rothschild lone cannon
suggested here that the 1832 loan made the Vatican dependent on Rothschild
financing at the time and this dependence continues into the modern era
this is not surprising since at the time the Vatican was desperate to maintain
its diminishing temporal authority over the remaining territory of the papal
States seven five four one eight seven zero which was increasingly being
challenged by Italian secular nationalists it was this effort to
maintain political control over the papal States that made the Vatican
increasingly dependent on the Rothschilds who could move their agents
and to senior positions in the Catholic Church hierarchy this included the
Sovereign Military Order of the Knights of Malta which continues to be a
powerful force that linked Rothschild finances with elites drawn from around
the world kundan is telling us that the Rothschild family influence is very
important for understanding the financial power behind the deep state
and the Vatican is a key player in all of
this however there is more to the Rothschild family than simply possessing
financial influence over the Vatican this is where it becomes very helpful to
recount a story told by a former US Air Force doctor doe legal MD who described
in a Project Camelot interview a mysterious encounter he had with a
leading member of the Rothschild family Baron Guy de Rothschild in 1992 I woke
up in the middle of the night bolt upright and a sat up and I had all the
lights on because I'd have to periodically go to the restroom or
whatever I had all the lights on and this guy was standing in front of me
with what I call a $5,000 tuxedo not a grey hair in his head mid 50s slim and
trim I said how did you get in here and he says it's wonderful to see you my son
I said you are not my father and I looked at the sky and he looked like
French nobility right and I said who are you he says I am the Baron Guy de
Rothschild the Piner and I had this really kind of what I call a cheque or a
kind of a cringe in my spirit and I knew right away because I have this gift
right without getting into a big long discussion I knew right away I said I
know who you are you're the representative of the Lucifer power that
controls earth he says yes I am the CEO of Earth Incorporated and I am the man
that sits in the 13th chair of the druidic Council I want you to be my
understudy and when i transcend i want you to take over my job and I said no
I'm not going to he said we know your bloodlines we know your genetics we know
everything about you and you're a perfect replacement for me and I said no
what is interesting here is Rothschilds claim that he was the pine Durand was
the CEO of earthing incorporated this suggests that he is
merely running the earth on behalf of others but who for an answer we can look
to information about the Piner supplied by british researcher david grote about
the pine Durand the biggest secret after interviewing the former participant in
Satanic occult ceremonies Arizona Wilder throat Finder means penis of the Dragon
Arizona says that pine dur like all the reptilians when they shape-shift has
very powerful hypnotic eyes the evil eye of legend and at sacrifices the victims
faces turned to pine derp at the moment of death for him to steal the person's
soul or energy through this evil eye magnetic process pine durr attends the
major satanic ceremonies in europe and then flies to california for their
rituals their pages 302 to 3 the idea that a high-ranking member of the
Rothschild family Guy de Rothschild was a shape-shifting reptilian or a hybrid
of some kind will come as - a shock to many who disbelieve that
extraterrestrial life is a physical reality on earth this disbelief will be
markedly the case for those coming from a Christian background who ascribed the
Satanic Luciferian influence on earth to otherworldly demonic entities associated
with Hell as described in biblical passages however only last week Pope
Francis declared that there is no Hell in an interview he was quoted saying
they are not punished those who repent obtain the forgiveness of God and enter
the rank of souls who contemplate him but those who do not repent and cannot
therefore be forgiven disappear there is no hell there is the disappearance of
sinful souls while the Vatican immediately tried to walk back the
Pope's comments his intent was very clear hell is no mere spiritual
dimension where Satan rules and acts as a distant but disruptive influence on
earth through his legion of demonic spirits the Pope has clarified that hell
is a very Zuka reality and corresponds to the
world created around us by sinful souls participating in satanic rituals
involving human sacrifice and pedophilia the implication here is that Satan is a
very physical being who is present on earth and has overlordship of the planet
through hybrid intermediaries such as the pine der which collectively make up
the deep state
-------------------------------------------
QAnon Reveals Vatican Rothschild Reptilian Connection Behind The Deep State - Duration: 9:22.Reptilian extraterrestrials in a recent series of posts the anonymous
whistleblower group cannon made an important connection between the Vatican
Rothschild family and reptilian symbolism many followers of cannon to
fall into the camp of Christian Patriots perceive the connection as exposing
another world lay satanic influence over the Vatican their auth and other forces
making up the deep state closer analysis however suggests that what Canon is
really referring to by the symbolism is a very physical this worldly influence
over the deep state reptilian extraterrestrials to begin with I need
to point out what has become very clear to those closely following the Canon
posts which first appeared on October 28th 2017 Canon represents several
military intelligence officials who are leaking sensitive information and a
cryptic and coded Man or due to the pervasive influence of the deep state
over many institutions of political financial and cultural power canons
close relationship with President Donald Trump has been demonstrated in various
public ways this has signaled he supports the Canon revelations and is
very familiar with who is really behind the deep state attempting to sabotage
his presidency in regard to deep state efforts to sabotage the Trump presidency
I highly recommend reading dr. Jerome courses book killing the deep state we
are now ready to take a closer look at what Canon is saying about the Vatican
Rothschilds and the reptilian connection on April 3rd canon made the following
post where he attached an image posted by another anonymous source asking the
question if Satanists took over the Vatican would you notice so does the
symbolism and that Paul the sixth audience Hall really shown reptilian
control over the Vatican Canon helps answer such a question by his response
to the posted image symbolism will be their downfall money power influenced by
emphasizing symbolism Kanon is saying that we need to closely
examine the reptilian imagery in the picture in order to really understand
who controls the Vatican Canadians - money power influence points to a nexus
of actors that underscore control of the Vatican this is where another canon post
becomes helpful in understanding this nexus of actors he pointed out that the
Vatican Bank Institute for the works of religion is at the fulcrum point of its
financial influence through its shady relationship with the CI a clown
connection indeed this close relationship between the
Vatican and the CIA gave rise to operation Gladio that was targeted
against left-wing organizations that threatened to tear Italy away from NATO
towards a closer relationship with the Soviet Union to understand the Vatican's
role in operation Gladio I highly recommend Paul Williams book Operation
Gladio the unholy alliance between the Vatican the c.i.a and the Mafia
however Koons most intriguing reference was to the 1832 Rothschild lone cannon
suggested here that the 1832 loan made the Vatican dependent on Rothschild
financing at the time and this dependence continues into the modern era
this is not surprising since at the time the Vatican was desperate to maintain
its diminishing temporal authority over the remaining territory of the papal
States seven five four one eight seven zero which was increasingly being
challenged by Italian secular nationalists it was this effort to
maintain political control over the papal States that made the Vatican
increasingly dependent on the Rothschilds who could move their agents
and to senior positions in the Catholic Church hierarchy this included the
Sovereign Military Order of the Knights of Malta which continues to be a
powerful force that linked Rothschild finances with elites drawn from around
the world kundan is telling us that the Rothschild family influence is very
important for understanding the financial power behind the deep state
and the Vatican is a key player in all of
this however there is more to the Rothschild family than simply possessing
financial influence over the Vatican this is where it becomes very helpful to
recount a story told by a former US Air Force doctor doe legal MD who described
in a Project Camelot interview a mysterious encounter he had with a
leading member of the Rothschild family Baron Guy de Rothschild in 1992 I woke
up in the middle of the night bolt upright and a sat up and I had all the
lights on because I'd have to periodically go to the restroom or
whatever I had all the lights on and this guy was standing in front of me
with what I call a $5,000 tuxedo not a grey hair in his head mid 50s slim and
trim I said how did you get in here and he says it's wonderful to see you my son
I said you are not my father and I looked at the sky and he looked like
French nobility right and I said who are you he says I am the Baron Guy de
Rothschild the Piner and I had this really kind of what I call a cheque or a
kind of a cringe in my spirit and I knew right away because I have this gift
right without getting into a big long discussion I knew right away I said I
know who you are you're the representative of the Lucifer power that
controls earth he says yes I am the CEO of Earth Incorporated and I am the man
that sits in the 13th chair of the druidic Council I want you to be my
understudy and when i transcend i want you to take over my job and I said no
I'm not going to he said we know your bloodlines we know your genetics we know
everything about you and you're a perfect replacement for me and I said no
what is interesting here is Rothschilds claim that he was the pine Durand was
the CEO of earthing incorporated this suggests that he is
merely running the earth on behalf of others but who for an answer we can look
to information about the Piner supplied by british researcher david grote about
the pine Durand the biggest secret after interviewing the former participant in
Satanic occult ceremonies Arizona Wilder throat Finder means penis of the Dragon
Arizona says that pine dur like all the reptilians when they shape-shift has
very powerful hypnotic eyes the evil eye of legend and at sacrifices the victims
faces turned to pine derp at the moment of death for him to steal the person's
soul or energy through this evil eye magnetic process pine durr attends the
major satanic ceremonies in europe and then flies to california for their
rituals their pages 302 to 3 the idea that a high-ranking member of the
Rothschild family Guy de Rothschild was a shape-shifting reptilian or a hybrid
of some kind will come as - a shock to many who disbelieve that
extraterrestrial life is a physical reality on earth this disbelief will be
markedly the case for those coming from a Christian background who ascribed the
Satanic Luciferian influence on earth to otherworldly demonic entities associated
with Hell as described in biblical passages however only last week Pope
Francis declared that there is no Hell in an interview he was quoted saying
they are not punished those who repent obtain the forgiveness of God and enter
the rank of souls who contemplate him but those who do not repent and cannot
therefore be forgiven disappear there is no hell there is the disappearance of
sinful souls while the Vatican immediately tried to walk back the
Pope's comments his intent was very clear hell is no mere spiritual
dimension where Satan rules and acts as a distant but disruptive influence on
earth through his legion of demonic spirits the Pope has clarified that hell
is a very Zuka reality and corresponds to the
world created around us by sinful souls participating in satanic rituals
involving human sacrifice and pedophilia the implication here is that Satan is a
very physical being who is present on earth and has overlordship of the planet
through hybrid intermediaries such as the pine der which collectively make up
the deep state
-------------------------------------------
U.S. Commander Says 5,200 troops to the Southern Border "Just the Start" - Duration: 3:42.The Trump administration is responding to the Central American caravan heading towards
the U.S. southern border by sending 5,200 military personnel to protect the United States.
Homeland Security and Pentagon officials said that the soldiers would focus on helping secure
key points of entry into the United States.
The deployment has been named 'Operation Faithful Patriot.'
According to a new report, a U.S. commander says the "5,200 troops" is just the beginning
of the operation and more troops will follow.
From Washington Examiner
SHOW OF FORCE: U.S. Northern Commander Air Force Gen. Terrence O'Shaughnessy is tackling
his mission to use the military to harden the southern border with gusto.
"We know border security is national security," he told reporters at a news conference yesterday,
in which he announced that 800 soldiers from Fort Campbell, Ky., are already en route to
Texas.
By week's end they will be joined by thousands more, not just in Texas, but also in Arizona
and California.
"By the end of this week, we will deploy over 5,200 soldiers to the southwest border.
That is just the start of this operation.
We'll continue to adjust the numbers and inform you of those," O'Shaughnessy said.
THE MISSION: The active-duty troops have two main objectives: Reinforce infrastructure,
such as security barriers at 26 designated ports of entry, and help seal gaps in the
border between the crossing points where immigrants may try to cross illegally.
But the responsibility for border security will remain with U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
"Our first level of effort with CBP will be to harden the points of entry and address
key gaps in areas around the points of entry," O'Shaughnessy said.
CBP Commissioner Kevin McAleenan disputed the idea that the deployment of thousands
of troops was a political ploy in advance of the midterms elections.
"No, this is a law enforcement operation from CBP's perspective and we partner with
DOD all the time to help secure our border," McAleenan said.
WHAT THE MILITARY BRINGS: Combat engineers to build things, such as barriers, walls,
fencing and tent cities.
"We have enough concertina wire to cover up to 22 miles, already deployed to the border.
We have additional concertina wire that we can string, with over 150 miles available,"
O'Shaughnessy said.
Helicopters to surveil the border, and quickly transport special operations Border Patrol
Tactical Units to austere locations where they can fast-rope down to the ground if needed.
And medical units to treat both border protection agents and immigrants.
WHAT'S THE THREAT?
The border patrol is concerned about being overwhelmed due to the sheer number of asylum
seekers, even if they try to enter through a designated border crossing.
"We've got to be prepared for the potential arrival of a very large group," McAleenan
said.
"What we saw when this group crossed the Honduras-Guatemala borders, they did it very
forcefully.
They pushed past the Guatemalan security forces.
Even more risky was on the Guatemala-Mexico border, where it was a combination, of you
know, near-rioting on the bridge and then crossing illegally."
The CBP says there are now two groups in Mexico each numbering more than 3,000.
-------------------------------------------
Illegal Invaders Just Got Massive Gift To Help Them Get To US – Who Paid For This?! - Duration: 2:50.This is quite disturbing.
Thankfully we have a President who will protect the border.
Remember this when voting this election.
From The Gateway Pundit:
FOX News reporter Griff Jenkins is traveling with one of the illegal immigrant caravans
on its way to the US.
Caravan Organizers are seen loading illegal immigrants on buses to take them to their
next stop on their way to the United States.
There are currently FOUR DIFFERENT CARAVANS working their way to the southern US border
through Central America and Mexico.
Meanwhile, as we previously reported, these so-called "migrants" are not actually
"refugees" as the left likes to call them since they are refusing multiple residential
settlement options.
So what's their real motive here?
Denver 7 News is now reporting that members of the soon to be illegal alien caravan have
rejected an offer from Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto to settle in Mexico.
The thousands of illegal aliens within the group have instead decided to continue their
trip towards the United States which is very interesting since Peña Nieto's offer would
actually put the migrants into two Mexican states.
Where they would be offered temporary work permits, medical care, shelter, and even schooling.
But not welfare!
Here is more via The AP:
"Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto has announced what he called the "You are at
home" plan, offering shelter, medical attention, schooling and jobs to Central Americans in
Chiapas and Oaxaca states if migrants apply, calling it a first step toward permanent refugee
status.
Authorities said more than 1,700 had already applied for refugee status.
But a standoff unfolded as federal police officers blocked the highway, saying there
was an operation underway to stop the caravan.
Thousands of migrants waited to advance, vowing to continue their long trek toward the U.S.
border.
At a meeting brokered by Mexico's National Human Rights Commission, police said they
would reopen the highway and only wanted an opportunity for federal authorities to explain
the proposal to migrants who had rejected it the previous evening.
Migrants countered that the middle of a highway was no place to negotiate and said they wanted
to at least arrive safely to Mexico City to discuss the topic with authorities and Mexican
lawmakers
They agreed to relay information back to their respective sides and said they would reconvene.
-------------------------------------------
Hispanic advocacy groups against effort to curb US birthright citizenship - Duration: 1:58. For more infomation >> Hispanic advocacy groups against effort to curb US birthright citizenship - Duration: 1:58.-------------------------------------------
U.S. Diplomatic Couriers - Behind the Iron Curtain - Duration: 23:33.NARRATOR: In 1918, the Diplomatic Courier Service
was established to support the work of American diplomats
by ensuring that classified messages and materials were
delivered safely and securely to U.S. embassies and consulates
around the world.
Over the 100 year history of the Courier Service,
this mission, critical to the national security of the United
States, has not changed.
In the 1950s, before the onset of the jet age,
this small group of couriers traveled tens of thousands
of miles per year, often spending months on the road.
Following World War II, as tensions between former allies
grew into the Cold War and the Soviets consolidated power
on their Western border, it became increasingly
difficult to reach our posts behind what became
known as the Iron Curtain.
Because of a continued mutual respect
for international conventions on diplomatic relations,
even during these complicated times,
diplomatic couriers were among the few still able
to travel across these borders.
Each week, they took the Orient Express from Vienna
to reach Budapest and Bucharest.
MR. JAMES VERREOS: Oh, the Orient Express.
That was, of course, a fabled train ride.
We never got to ride it all the way to Constantinople
or Istanbul, but we would pick it up in Vienna
and ride it in from Vienna to Budapest to Bucharest.
Then we would turn around and come back out.
Sometimes inside Europe, we'd take train travel
because it was more effective and quicker
than trying to take an airplane, especially when we
were providing service to the Iron Curtain countries, which
required two couriers to be on a trip for security reasons.
We were carrying classified material.
Top secret wasn't always something that was written.
In those days before the technology we have today,
we had to have code machines,
equipment that was highly classified.
Outside of the Iron Curtain you traveled solo.
For example, when delivering the pouches
to Southeast Asia or Africa or South America,
the courier went out on trips solo.
However, trips to the Iron Curtain,
we were always in pairs so that there was no possibility
that the couriers would be unable to have
control of their pouches.
MR. KENNETH COOPER: I think I've got the history right.
The reason we'd make paired trips behind the Curtain
goes back to immediate post-war.
An American courier fell off the train, and he was killed,
and his pouch disappeared for a while.
And there was, I think, a little suspicion
that this was not an accident.
Henceforth, the Americans decided
it would be a paired trip, and I think the British did the same.
MR. DONOVAN KLINE: You had to have somebody with the pouches
at all times.
We'd get out and walk up and down
the aisle in the Wagon-Lits, but that was as far as we ventured.
On the same sleeping cars, there were other couriers
from other nations -
Italian, French, Russians.
When they were outside of Russia,
they traveled paired, just like we did
behind the Iron Curtain.
That's one of the things about the Russians.
They wanted the same treatment in the West
that we were given behind the Iron Curtain, which
was decent for the most part.
MR. PHILIP OLIVARES: Well, your job
was to take care of those pouches.
I don't think we ever felt that somebody was threatening
us or trying to try to steal them,
but we always have to assume that.
In fact, I remember Jim Vandivier
and I got off the train with our pouches.
There was quite a load.
We pulled over one of these baggage cars
that was already half loaded, the porter said,
and there were Russian pouches on that.
There were two Russian couriers.
So here were the four of us.
He's got the pouches, watching our own bags.
There was only one baggage cart.
We tried to get a separate one, but they said no,
and that was it.
I thought how ironic -
the four of us in this situation.
We were stationed in Vienna.
There were two of us then.
Monday we would go into Budapest
and spend the night, and then the next day on to Bucharest.
MR. COOPER: Vienna itself was a lot of fun, and
so was Budapest. Except for the brief hiatus in Bucharest,
which was dull as dishwater,
the rest of it was fun.
MR. ERNEST HOHMAN: We used the Arlberg Orient
Express, which came out of Paris
but we picked it up in Vienna.
It's just a delightful city.
It showed the grandeur that it had
as part of the Austro-Hungarian empire,
even though it was somewhat damaged from
the rubble after the war.
[MUSIC - JOHANN STRAUSS - "THE BLUE DANUBE"]
The Austrians - one of the first things they thought
was important to rebuild was the Opera House.
And now to see the change, the transformation,
the rebuilding that was going on there.
Loved going to the opera.
Of course, the Danube is not blue.
It's only in the eyes of a poet and a composer.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
[VOCALIZING]
MR. KLINE: I attended my first and only opera, sung in German,
which I did not understand, and as a result never went
to another opera in my life.
[LAUGHS]
We did a lot of eating and a lot of sightseeing.
All of us did, because it was a fantastic city.
I repeated that Vienna detail several times
thereafter in later years.
It was always enjoyable for me because we got out
of the air for a while.
It was restful. On those trains
all we did was sleep, eat, and play
chess or pinochle or something like that.
MR. VINCENT CELLA: The courier would come down from Frankfurt
every week or twice a week to give us the stuff to take in.
Then we'd go shopping to get our food to take on the train,
made sure we had enough wine or scotch and reading material,
cards, et cetera.
And we'd leave at night from the West Bahnhof in Vienna
and made one stop,
I guess it's called the North Bahnhof.
And then into the border, which on the Austrian side
is Nickelsdorf.
And it would stay there for some long time.
So, even though Vienna is not that far from Budapest,
it was an overnight trip.
MR. VERREOS: The train, the Orient Express,
would set up a single sleeper car
for the diplomatic couriers.
That would be the British, the Queen's Messenger,
King's Messenger, the Italians, whoever -
any courier from any nation that was making a trip
would be on that train.
MR. HOHMAN: The other people in the sleeping compartments,
they were all diplomatic couriers
from various countries.
There were Italians and the British and the French,
also, because the air travel was not possible, particularly
during the winter months there.
We usually dressed rather casually at that point.
And the Italians would dress in their silk pajamas or a silk
robe and so on.
The English, which were the Queen's Messengers,
they were great storytellers,
raconteurs, and had fantastic tales to tell.
MR. COOPER: The Queen's Messenger was usually
a very senior officer,
an army officer or a military officer
or sometimes civil servant.
They traveled in pairs also, but their junior courier
was usually a retired policeman, so there
was a very distinct difference in rank.
So when the Queen's Messenger had his dinner,
the number two courier would lay out
a white tablecloth in his compartment
and proceed to serve him his meal.
We got a kick out of that.
MR. OLIVARES: The primary car for us was the old
Wagon-Lits Cook.
They handled all the sleeping cars.
The first class car was practically all couriers.
There was a dining car next to it, but the food was awful.
We had to cook our own food, so we all
carried a little alcohol stove we'd set up in the sleeping
compartment and we'd cook on that.
MR. VERREOS: The ride in would leave early in the evening,
and we would have dinner while we were on the train.
We had developed an international society of couriers,
and we'd set it up in advance so that the couriers
from this country would bring in an entree, the couriers
from the other country would bring in the salad, who
would bring in the dessert, who would bring in the wine,
and what have you.
And we would just merely leave notes
so that next week's couriers - we didn't know who they'd be,
but you'd get into Vienna and say, hey, it's this week,
I would say, well, if Ken and I were on a trip,
we got the note at the embassy
we were supposed to provide the wine.
We knew there'd be x number of couriers on board,
and we'd bring that much on.
Coming out was totally different.
The train left Bucharest near midnight,
so everybody was sacked in, and it was dawn
by the time you arrived in Vienna.
MR. CELLA: We slept in one compartment
on that portion of that trip.
Then it would cross into Hungary,
and that town was called Hegyeshalom.
After they stopped there for a long time,
we'd go into Budapest, and we'd arrive there in the morning.
MR. KLINE: We'd get off the train
and have a full 24 hour period in Budapest
where we could shop, look around.
And the parliament building there
was magnificent, especially from across the river where
you could see it so plainly.
MR. HOHMAN: It was an interesting city.
It was still showing war damage.
The bridge across the Danube River was destroyed.
It was laying there in the river itself.
But, you see, it had a glamor to it
yet, and it was trying to restore that.
And it was an exciting and interesting city
with a bit of the schmaltz that you had in Vienna,
Austria too, with evening dinners that were excellent
and violin music to go with it.
MR. COOPER: We'd have a layover sometimes, a day
or so in Budapest, which was fun.
It was still a lively city, and it was before the revolution.
MR. OLIVARES: Budapest itself -
I loved the city.
A lot of people consider it the Paris of Eastern Europe.
It still had some damage though, from World War II,
actually.
And then after the revolution, of course,
it really got torn apart.
In spite of communism and all the restrictions
they imposed on their society, they
were a really fun loving people.
I remember going to a nightclub and seeing the people dancing
and having a ball, and I thought, this can't be.
Everywhere else usually is so drab, like Moscow itself.
To see those people enjoying themselves and having fun,
they were a fun people.
MR. VERREOS: Hungary was the nicest place in the Iron
Curtain for couriers.
Even though you were always under surveillance
by the local KGB -
they were called AVOs in Hungary -
they were less intrusive than they were in Moscow.
MR. CELLA: We spent the whole day and the night
at the Hotel Duna, which was really a nice hotel
right on the Danube.
They had a nice restaurant, a little nice bar, and there
was a guy there that we used to refer to as AVO Joe,
and he would always befriend the couriers.
And we were sure that he were being paid by the AVO
just to keep an eye on the couriers,
but we all sort of liked the guy.
He was helpful, a funny old guy.
And you enjoyed walking around Budapest,
even though it was still pretty well shot
because of the revolution.
In fact, they did more damage, I think, during that time
than they did during the war.
What I always understood was that the Russian troops didn't want
to fight against the Hungarians, and the AVO
were tougher on the Hungarian citizens
than the Russian soldiers.
The revolution started right in front of the Hotel Duna,
and the two couriers were stuck in there for about a week.
They were Woody Vest and Phil Olivares.
MR. OLIVARES: We got off at the station.
We went to the Duna Hotel.
The Duna is the word for the Danube, of course.
It was right on the river.
It was quite a hotel.
It's an old fashioned hotel with the high ceilings and all that.
We liked the place.
And I remember Woody Vest and I, we went to see the opera.
They were doing "Eugene Onegin."
We came back from the theater, and then
we got into the elevator, and we heard
some noise and such about.
We thought something's going on around town.
I think we heard a shot or two, if I'm not mistaken.
But I remember -
and in the elevator was the New York Times correspondent
and his wife.
And we said, well,
we asked him,
I said, "You know, what's going on?"
He said, "Oh, it seems to be a minor thing" and all that.
Well, [CHUCKLES] we went up to our rooms.
The next morning, we got a call from the Legation
saying, "Stay put.
You're not going anyplace.
Everything is closing down.
We're in the beginning of an insurrection."
And that's when it started.
And the shooting starts.
And we just stayed put a couple of days.
There was British couriers in there as well.
There was some shooting.
I think I walked out to see what was going on at one point.
I walked a few feet, and I heard bullets whizzing by my ear,
and I said, I better get back into the hotel.
And then I realized it was really bad.
And they even brought in a Russian soldier
who had been hit by a sniper. One of the Hungarian insurgents
was up on the roof.
[GUNFIRE]
The Legation wanted to evacuate most of the personnel.
In fact, most of legations - the British as well.
They put us in Embassy cars with dependents,
and we drove out of Budapest with the flag
flying on the fenders like Ambassadors' cars.
But I remember the people applauding and clapping
when they saw Americans and British flags.
All around them were Russians.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
I remember, even in the hotel, the men behind the desk,
the reception desk, kept saying,
"Where are you Americans?
Why don't you help us?"
They said, "Your Voice of America tells
us to rise up, do something about it,
and now we need your help."
RADIO COMMENTATOR: [SPEAKING HUNGARIAN]
RADIO COMMENTATOR: [SPEAKING HUNGARIAN]
MR. OLIVARES: I felt so embarrassed by all of this,
in a sense.
Why aren't we helping these people?
And I felt a little guilty that we were
like rats leaving this ship.
They were applauding but we're not really
doing anything for them.
We should be doing something for them,
and we should have our tanks in here.
But I know that's not something for me to decide on.
And I always felt a little guilty about that going out.
We're going out to safety, and these people
got to be here and live with the Russians on top of them.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
MR. CELLA: The longest part was when you got on the train
the next morning to Bucharest because that was overnight
from the morning to the next morning.
After going all through the Ploiesti oil fields.
Oh, you see them burning the gas off the top.
It was really something.
Yeah, that was pretty close to the end of the trip because
they were up still in the mountains.
Not long after that, you came down into Bucharest.
You'd get in in the morning, and leave late at night.
So you'd spend the whole day in Bucharest.
For most of the time I was there,
we stayed with the Military Attache, no matter who he was.
MR. KLINE: We would arrive in Bucharest
early in the morning, six o'clock or so,
something like that, and we would
go to the Military Attache's residence.
He provided us with breakfast.
They couldn't get fruits and vegetables and stuff like that.
We would carry oranges into them and give them
oranges or bananas.
The diplomatic colony there,
the Western diplomatic colony,
had a six hole golf course at a club that they had
where they had a bar.
And you could play six holes.
And I did.
I played six holes of golf there more than once.
A place for the Western community
to relax without anybody around spying on them -
and I'm sure there was plenty of that behind the Iron Curtain
at all times.
I don't know whether I was followed.
I wasn't looking for it.
But we were briefed beforehand:
"Don't fraternize.
Don't get caught with any women behind the Iron
Curtain, period."
MR. CELLA: Well, we went out a lot of times
to that diplomatic golf course, especially in the good weather.
We would bring cigarettes and razorblades and instant coffee
to pay for our golf lessons.
And there was a little lake there
where you could go out in a little boat
to help spend the day because it wasn't that long
and we left again that night.
We had to check in and get the pouches
and leave to go back.
MR. COOPER: I found Bucharest a very uninteresting city.
Now they were really behind the Curtain there.
I can't recall having any interaction at all.
For their sake and our sake, it was better not to.
That was my impression.
Perhaps if I were to go back today, I'd be dead wrong.
MR. HOHMAN: Bucharest - yeah.
We had time there too, and it's a poorer country.
It was a dictatorship for quite a while under Ceausescu.
As we well know, the people were really dominated
with the secret police, although the communist elite
led a very gracious and a very luxurious lifestyle.
I found it rather a poor city, by contrast even
with Budapest which still had a glory aspect to it.
MR. CELLA: Going back it was a little different.
We would get some food in Bucharest,
buy bread and buy this and buy that
at these little outlet stores.
You know, you had to stand in line to buy some stuff.
It was depressing, in a way -
for the people, I mean.
As we came back on that trip, we would
leave in the night from Bucharest,
get in the next night into Budapest.
The train would stop in Budapest for quite a long time.
You could see that red star in the foggy night mist.
Not until the next morning we'd end up back in Vienna.
MR. OLIVARES: We'd enjoy those trips.
I think we all did.
I still think it's a more civilized way to travel,
by train.
Train stations were fascinating in those days.
They had all the excitement that airports took on.
I remember in Europe, the railroad stations themselves -
they were big, cavernous affairs, mostly wrought iron
and such.
There was an aura about them all that fascinated me.
I felt so proud to be part of all of that.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
-------------------------------------------
U.S. Senate Debate: Should the U.S. block the Raytheon arms deal with Saudi Arabia? - Duration: 3:45. For more infomation >> U.S. Senate Debate: Should the U.S. block the Raytheon arms deal with Saudi Arabia? - Duration: 3:45.-------------------------------------------
S. Korea and U.S. agree to establish new working group to cooperate on N. Korea's nuclear issue - Duration: 0:37.Meanwhile, South Korea and the U.S. have agreed to establish a new working group on North
Korea issues.
This is one outcome of this week's visit to Seoul by the U.S. Special Representative for
North Korea, Steven Biegun.
The State Department said Tuesday that the group will further strengthen the two allies'
cooperation on diplomacy, denuclearization efforts, the implementation of UN sanctions
and ways for the two Koreas to cooperate under the sanctions.
The working group will be headed by Special Representative Biegun.
The State Department also said Seoul and Washington are coordinating on an almost daily basis.
-------------------------------------------
Mass. US Senate candidates asked if deficits matter? - Duration: 3:36. For more infomation >> Mass. US Senate candidates asked if deficits matter? - Duration: 3:36.-------------------------------------------
Thoughts On Tipping Culture [UK/US + Worldwide] - Duration: 5:52.So this is a video about tipping and just some thoughts
I'm a Brit, I'm living in Turkey
and I've just been out for dinner as you do
and I went to a nice restaurant, I had some salmon
it was very delicious
yep, that was a salmon burp
and I had a lovely meal and the staff were great
this was actually the second time I'd been to this said restaurant
the first time was a few days ago
when I went there, it (the food) was delicious
and I gave what I guess was considered quite a generous tip
now I went back today and I thought, hang on a minute, I'm out of cash, I've got my card, but I'd spent all my cash
the nearest ATM is a long walk
you can see where this is going
I'm there, in the restaurant, having these amazing olives and bread and water
and tea and salmon and salad, and it's all beautiful and they're treating me like royalty
totally undeservedly, I'm being treated like a prince
and I'm thinking... uhh... I'm really... I feel really bad now
because I'm kind of feeling his expectation of that
big tip, what is considered a pretty generous tip
it's going to buy him a meal or something or like a bottle of wine... I don't know
and I'm there like, 'oh no, I can't leave him a tip in cash and I'm paying on card', I'm stressing out
it's ridiculous right? And I'm there by myself, I've got nothing better to think about
than how let down this poor guy
who's a great waiter, can't fault him at all
is going to feel let down when I either don't give him a tip or certainly can't give him cash
so I'm there, I'm like, great, this is really good, and he's coming over, he's smiling, he's like 'is everything okay?'
I'm like, 'yes it is okay'
but like, everything's fine, apart from the fact that I can't give you a tip right now
now this is kind of by the by but...
it brought up a topic
which I have been baffled by when living in the US
when I've been spending time in the United States, in America
and that is... tipping. Now in the UK
we might tip our waiter/ waitress, maybe a £1 or £2 or £3
for like a typical high street Wagamama meal
like a few quid
it's great, maybe 10% or something like that
if you go to a really posh restaurant, maybe a bit more
you might a bit more of a generous tip but...
over in the United States, which maybe you're from, I don't know... leave a comment and...
tell me what your thoughts on this are
because I genuinely am intrigued
okay, I get that wait staff have traditionally been paid so little
that they actually kind of rely on their tips
now that is a totally different thing
in the UK we have this thing called minimum wage
where even, whatever job you're doing, even if you're a waiter, waitress, whatever
you are... you're paid what is a liveable wage supposedly
you can argue about that as well whether that's liveable or not but the point is
you'll be on £6-8 an hour
or something, whatever it is now, it was like £4.50 or something
when I used to work, I used to work on £3.25 an hour, that was my hourly rate
that was a while back
10 years ago now, but whatever, you get the point
okay so.... my thing is like...
okay so tipping's fine, great, but in America,
it's totally expected
so you go to a restaurant in the United States and
you are expected to leave a tip and if you don't there's outrage
it's a very strange thing to me
and it kind of... I wouldn't say it stresses me out, but it definitely...
my perfect meal is one where I go, I eat my food, I don't really have to...
this sounds weird, maybe you can psychoanalyse this
I would rather not, maybe it's a British thing, I don't know, but if you're British back me up here
I'd like to go to a meal
I'd like to go to a restaurant, eat my meal, eat food, and just like, pretty much have minimal engagement with
the wait staff, because I'm probably like
with someone, or chatting or whatever, and... or if I'm by myself and I'm reading
I don't know being anti social I guess
and yeah like, of course I don't want to be treated rudely
by staff but, what I kind of dislike
and I'm going to be very honest now is
the kind of, fake, hello, how are you today, yeah, you having a nice day?
when you're in a restaurant in the United States
so that really annoys me, and I know I'm not the only one, I know loads of Brits feel like this
I'd rather just go, get my food, and pay the price
in places like Japan, China, you know, Thailand
I think mostly Eastern Asian countries, I know it's almost considered an insult
to tip in Japan because well here's the price, this is the food, just pay the price
and I quite like that
I really like that, and I know there's a restaurant that popped up recently
in I think California
I can't remember the name right now, but I'll put it in the description
and it's a restaurant where basically tipping doesn't happen
and... it's kind of starting a new trend of no tips because
clearly I'm not the only who finds this whole thing a bit strange, a bit weird and a bit kind of awkward and uncomfortable
so they're actually starting a whole new pub based on the fact that there are no tips
the wait staff love it because they know exactly what to expect
and the customers love it because they pay a price, they get a meal, they get the standard
what's not to like right?
if you are Japanese, please back me up here, because
I listening to myself and I'm like...
I just sound really kind of like pissed off
but I'm not it's just something that I've always thought about
and now I'm sharing because it's an interesting difference between
how different countries do things and that's what my channel is all about
it's about, how do people in this country look at that country
and think about the behaviour and the little things that they do and that is interesting and different
from what you are used to
anyway, what happened with the story of guy and the tip?
I explained the situation, I was like look,
I have no cash, can I add a tip on a card?
he was like yeah no problem, no problem
so I gave him a nice big tip on a card
and I checked with him, I said, will you get this tip?
he said, yes it's fine, brought me out some tea and it was all good
it was really good
but anyway those are my thoughts on tipping
that's why I as a Brit find it a bit weird and a bit uncomfortable
especially in the United States
my name is Mike
the channel name is Arabic Mike
don't let that confuse you
it's because I started this channel in teaching
the Arabic language and that's kind of stuck
you can see more videos around here and if you want to see me again then SUBSCRIBE for more videos
leave a comment, tell me what you think about tipping
debate it, because it's something which I find
interesting, and I do see a trend potentially changing so share your thoughts
-------------------------------------------
Sing the States | 50 States Song | Jack Hartmann - Duration: 2:31.I'm proud to work and play In the USA
I'm proud to live everyday
In the land of the free
There are 50, 50
United States in this country
50, 50 Home of the proud and the free
Sing the states with me
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii Hawai'i
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
I'm proud to work and play In the USA
I'm proud to live everyday
In the land of the free
There are 50, 50 United States in this country
50, 50 Home of the proud and the free
Home of the proud and the free
Sing the states with me
-------------------------------------------
How anti-Semitism persists in the United States - Duration: 2:44. For more infomation >> How anti-Semitism persists in the United States - Duration: 2:44.-------------------------------------------
You probably don't know this about U.S. elections | HKS Professor Alex Keyssar - Duration: 4:12.[Announcer] Harvard Kennedy School presents
three things you didn't know about U.S. elections.
Number one.
There is no right to vote in the U.S. Constitution.
[Keyssar] It was not in the original Constitution.
It was not in the Bill of Rights.
This surprises most people.
The states had already developed franchise requirements
of their own and thinking in Philadelphia
was that if they chose any particular standard
it might well antagonize people from some states.
So, in effect they punted, didn't say anything
and left it to the states.
There have been attempts to add a right to vote
to the constitution and they have all failed
and never come close.
[Announcer] Number two.
Historically, voter suppression was not just a southern
problem.
[Keyssar] Most of us are quite aware that in the late 19th and
early 20th century, there were massive voter suppression
and disenfranchisement efforts in the south
that were aimed at African Americans.
What is less well known, is that there was an analogous
movement, less severe, but none the less important,
in the northern states to keep immigrant workers
from voting.
There were literacy requirements to vote
in many northern states, including Massachusetts.
There was an English language literacy requirement
that was passed in New York in 1921
and it remained on the books until the late 1960s.
In Minnesota there were laws that were passed
that prevented people who work in the timber industry,
these people were seen as itinerant,
and they were not allowed to vote.
Or one of my favorite examples,
was the suppression of Jewish voters in New York City
early in the 20th century for several years.
When New York had an annual registration requirement,
you had to register every year in order to vote.
And in one year to limit the voting strength
of New York's Jews and particularly New York's Jewish
socialists, the only registration days
were on the Jewish high holidays of Yom Kippur
and Rosh Hashanah.
[Announcer] Number three.
In the late 1960s, the U.S. almost abandoned
the Electoral College, but then it didn't.
[Keyssar] It has in recent years been a great deal of attention
focused on the Electoral College
and with good reason.
Because we have had two presidents within the last 20 years
have been elected, who did not win the popular vote.
What people don't know is that we got very close
to eliminating the Electoral College
and replacing it with a National popular vote
in 1969 and 70.
The impetus for it was coming
from several different directions.
The first was that from the late 1940s
through out the 50s, there were movements
to reform and nobody really thought
that it was a very good institution or a very wise one.
A second, was the Supreme Court decisions on districting
issues in the early 1960s would proclaim loudly
and clearly and unmistakably that the fundamental
democratic principle was one person one vote.
And it was very hard to embrace that principle
without thinking that perhaps it should apply
to presidential elections as well.
In September of 1969, the House of Representatives
voted by, I think it was, 82 percent
to amend the constitution
to get rid of the Electoral College
and have a National popular vote.
It was killed by a filibuster, led by souther senators.
But there was a real democratic surge.
A surge of a democratic ethos in the United States
in the 1960s and it almost carried are way forward
into getting rid of the Electoral College.
[Announcer] Thank you, Professor Keyssar.
If you liked this video, hit the like button.
And if you'd like to see more, subscribe.
-------------------------------------------
U.S. Diplomatic Couriers - Into Moscow - Duration: 26:12.[MUSIC PLAYING]
NARRATOR: In 1918, the Diplomatic Courier Service
was established to support the work of American diplomats
by ensuring that classified messages and materials were
delivered safely and securely to U.S. embassies and consulates
around the world.
Over the hundred year history of the courier service
this core mission has not changed,
and remains critical to the national security
of the United States.
Before the onset of the jet age, this small group of couriers
traveled tens of thousands of miles per year,
often spending months on the road.
Following World War II, relations between the United
States and the Soviet Union -
once allies - were increasingly strained
and grew into what became known as the Cold War.
Even during these complicated times,
a mutual respect for international conventions
on diplomatic relations meant that the couriers
were among the few still able to travel into the Soviet Union.
Making the trip from Helsinki into Moscow several times
a week, they brought the diplomatic pouch
with classified correspondence from Washington,
news from the West, and even personal mail.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
MR. JAMES VERREOS: Some of the more interesting and funny things
occurred, of course, especially on trips to Moscow.
The Soviets were right on your back.
You were almost never six feet away from somebody who
was looking over your shoulder.
We served the Soviet Union by what we called a satellite
office in Helsinki.
MR. ERNEST HOHMAN: But Helsinki is very unique,
there's no question about it.
You go there in the winter months
and they have a sign that says, welcome to Santa Claus land.
And that's where, in a sense, you
feel - a lot of ice and snow.
But it's a beautiful country.
MR. KENNETH COOPER: Every time I had the Helsinki
detail it was always in December, January, or February.
So I have probably a different perspective
on this than the guys who did it in June, July, and August.
But we had a lot of fun there in the meantime.
MR. PHILIP OLIVARES: Well, that detail was about a month.
But we rotated on it, because I think
there were about four or five of us in the mill on that.
One man was traveling from Frankfurt by train
up to Hamburg.
From Hamburg they flew to Copenhagen,
and then continued on to Stockholm, and then
into Helsinki.
And two guys would take it from Helsinki
into Leningrad and into Moscow.
MR. VERREOS: We would station couriers
in Helsinki for usually a two month period.
And during those two months, all they would do
would make the twice weekly trips into the Soviet Union
with flights from Helsinki to Leningrad to Moscow
and back and out.
And then once a month, there was a train trip from Helsinki
to Moscow delivering the non-classified pouches.
By treaty,
nothing could come in as just plain freight material, as you
would say, commercial material.
Anything that went in for the embassy had to be in a pouch.
So when we're moving furniture, for example,
the non-classified pouch usually was one or two freight cars.
The material would be stuck into the freight car,
and the freight car would be closed,
and a wire and lead seal and a tag
would be placed on that freight car as if it were a bag.
MR. DONOVAN KLINE: On Helsinki detail,
there were four couriers at a time, up there rotating.
Once a month, we went to Moscow on a Russian
a sleeper train out of Helsinki Station.
We went to Viborg, and we passed through there
with little or no problems at all.
It was nighttime when we left -
of course, saw nothing.
It was pitch black.
We would take in surface pouches
with copies of Newsweek and Time.
MR. VERREOS: We were traveling soft class,
because the class conscious Soviets didn't
have anything like first class and second class.
They had soft class and hard class.
Well, we were traveling soft class,
so we would have a cabin.
All we did was play cards and enjoy whatever food
they had on the train.
It wasn't particularly what you'd call first class,
but it was better than hard class, believe me.
MR. COOPER: I think we had one train trip a month.
We flew in and out most of the time,
on a Russian Ilyushin 12 and then later an Ilyushin 14
airplane.
That was always kind of exciting.
I remember one instance where I had
something like 12 large bags, all under diplomatic seal.
And we took up the whole center of the airplane.
And I thought, surely Russian customs
are going to dig in their heels on this.
But they didn't bat an eye.
MR. KLINE: The other trips were always flying in.
And we flew in mostly on Aeroflot and FinnAir,
depending on the day of the week, I think.
MR. OLIVARES: First time I flew a Saab,
that was a funny experience.
Looked like a DC-3 with a nose wheel.
The stewardess would come and ask you,
"Have you ever been on the Saab before?"
And if you hadn't, they'd give you a little booklet.
They said, "Please do not be alarmed.
When we land the pilot will feather
the props to reverse the engines to slow down
to assist on the braking."
But on doing so, a whole sheet of flame
would come out of the exhaust things.
Blue flame would go past, I mean you could see this.
People, I remember seeing -
I was pre-warned by the little booklet -
but there was some guy who didn't read English
and didn't know this,
and he jumped out of his seat.
They were funny, those flights.
I remember on one of the Aeroflots, looking for my seatbelt.
And the pilot happened to be coming on board.
He was going down the aisle.
He said, "No, don't worry about that.
You don't need those."
We used to get these caviar sandwiches for breakfast.
It was a soft roll with fresh caviar, not the tinned stuff.
They took it for granted.
MR. VERREOS: Going to Moscow in those days -
to get off the train and walk around the city
was just depressive.
The Russians were, the people were hungry to hear about America.
A few of them would speak some English.
A few of them spoke some German.
Unfortunately, none of our couriers that I knew of
spoke Russki-
[SPEAKING RUSSIAN]
But whenever we were able to communicate,
they were very, very friendly, the Russian people.
Some KGB person was watching us.
They knew that.
And on a couple occasions, people at a party
that had one or two vodkas too many
would just flip the finger, knowing
that the KGB would get it.
Some were defiant, but there were very few.
MR. OLIVARES: Going into Moscow,
it was a little difficult. Everything was black, brown.
Nobody had any color on them at all.
The city was so drab.
It seems to me, most of my time in Moscow
had to be in the wintertime.
There was always snow on the streets,
people shoveling it away, and everybody doing their duty.
They just went about their life like a drudgery.
There was no happiness or pleasure in their faces.
Particularly when you got on the metro, which
was very elaborate.
The government decided this is going to be our showpiece,
and it was.
It was such a contrast with the people sitting in the metro.
MR. KLINE: First trip there, I was
surprised by how wide the streets were there.
They were really wide.
There was more traffic there than I expected to see.
A good bit of it was Russian trucks,
but there were more cars than I ever expected to see.
And we can go anywhere we wanted around town.
I walked a long ways there, up to Red Square one day.
Saw the mausoleum where the two stiffs were,
Lenin and Stalin.
It was interesting.
People were lined up eight abreast outside to get in.
When we got in, it was below ground.
They had selective lighting with these mummies were.
They looked very lifelike, both of them.
Stalin was somewhat shorter than I expected.
He was only about 5'3" or 4".
Lenin looked exactly like all the pictures
I'd ever seen of him -
goatee, the whole thing.
And he looked very natural.
We were respectful.
I wasn't sad at all.
The others were, because that's why they were there.
This was all they knew.
This was their life since 1917, and this was 1957 -
40 year anniversary that year.
It was interesting, to say the least.
MR. HOHMAN: We had this "propisk"
which allowed us to jump the line and get into the mausoleum
to see Lenin and Stalin.
Russians from outside of Moscow were
allowed at least once a year to come to Moscow
on their internal passport.
And there were huge lines in all kinds of weather.
One of the hotels that we had was near Red Square.
And after dinner I walked over to where the mausoleum is
for Lenin and Stalin, and watched
the changing of the guard.
And as I was watching, a man nudged up to me and said,
"You American?"
Yeah.
He said, "That's a nice coat you're wearing.
He said, "You want to sell it to me?"
I said, "No, it's the only coat I've got."
He said, "Do you have any jeans?"
I said, "Look, this is a sacred place.
We're right here for the changing of the guard.
We're in front of the mausoleum for Lenin and Stalin,
and you want to do this?"
He says, "Why not?
What better place?"
No, I didn't sell them anything or give him anything.
But I was really shocked about that situation, really.
Yeah.
I said, well, free enterprise.
We've got it right here.
But the whole Kremlin, we were allowed
to see the museum and so on.
And then across the way they had the GUM department store.
MR. COOPER: We got to go into the Kremlin
at one time on some kind of an embassy tour.
It was an unusual happening.
We were shown a typical dining room in the Tsar's palace.
I think they wanted to impress us on how high on the hog
the nobility lived as opposed to the peasants.
MR. KLINE: There weren't that many tourists in Moscow
in those days, outsiders.
I went through St. Basil's Cathedral
on Red Square, which I found fascinating for several things.
There were no church services being held in there,
but it was quite pretty inside besides being
beautiful outside.
There was a store there called GUM, G-U-M. I don't know
what it stood for in Russian.
I bought caviar there and hauled the caviar out to Helsinki
where we had parties with it.
And it was delicious beluga caviar, really delightful.
MR. COOPER: I did get to go to GUM, the big department store,
one time.
Sort of an exercise in futility.
Huge lines at every counter. There was
a shortage of everything.
MR. HOHMAN: The huge department store
was a depressing sort of place.
There were only limited things
that we could really find of interest, even though we
had a good exchange rate.
Musical instruments were rather cheap, or some books -
English books, because they didn't
recognize the copyrights.
One of the interesting things was
Russian caviar. The caviar was from virgin sturgeon,
they said.
That was the best tasting.
There really wasn't a heck of a lot to buy.
MR. VERREOS: In the men's shoe department
they had four sizes of shoes, and two colors -
black and brown.
Apparently they bought the size a little bigger so they could
stuff paper or whatever in so that the shoe would fit.
In 90% of the different stands, say in the women's department
for dresses or stockings and stuff like that,
they would have on display.
But they would have no product available to sell.
You'd go down the big street on which the embassy was,
to the various shops.
You'd go to the shop that sold bread.
And you look in there, and there is no bread.
But there'd be a line of people going around the block.
It was very depressing to see people there.
The pricing situation was ridiculous.
We could get seats to the Bolshoi in the first eight rows
for what it cost you to buy an egg if there was
one available in the market.
I remember, it was 32 rubles for the seats at the Bolshoi,
and it's 32 or 34 rubles to buy an egg.
MR. CELLA: We spent the afternoon
walking around Red Square.
We'd always get tickets to go to the Bolshoi
and Stanislavsky.
I remember coming out of an intermission at the Bolshoi.
I guess we were watching some big ballet.
The best seats are the first row of that center balcony.
And right in the first row of that sitting up above us
was Khrushchev and Bulganin.
Bulganin was the official head, and Khrushchev was the chairman.
We were that close to them.
The balcony is only like, that high
from the ceiling of this room.
MR. HOHMAN: There is a great amusement area,
Gorky Park.
Very nice, with the Ferris wheel that they had there.
It was a fun place. A lot of people with their children
there, also.
They had games, swings and so on, for them.
Chess was a big game. Of course there were
very skilled individuals using
all these well-known moves, and then
people surrounding these chess players, watching them.
And they're going, "Ooh, aah."
It was light and fun.
Moscow generally, because of the lighting
and because of the atmospheric conditions, the way
the buildings weren't properly maintained,
had a drab atmosphere to it.
This was a ray of sunshine, particularly during the spring
and summer months.
And a favorite among them was eating ice cream.
Because I understand Micoyan, one of the Russian premiers,
visited the United States and he liked ice cream.
He brought ice cream machines back to Russia.
And Russians, even you got four or five feet of snow
out there, eating a cone of ice cream.
MR. CELLA: We used to stay in that place called
the Amerikanski Dom,
the America House,
a good distance walk from the embassy.
MR. OLIVARES: That was a way from the embassy itself.
It was about a mile down the road.
There was a building with mostly the military air attache
people, the staff
and the sergeants and all that.
But that was a big center of life for the Americans.
That was - everybody, even the staff from the embassy
went down there.
And there was mostly bachelors in there.
MR. VERREOS: Over at Amerikanski Dom,
the America House, which was about two,
three miles away from the embassy,
and it was on the Moscow River pretty much opposite the entry
to Gorky Park.
And Amerikanski Dom is where the single personnel lived.
The girls that were so-called maids
to do the cleaning service and
the maids in the cafeteria in Amerikanski Dom
were all striking beauties, believe me.
MR. KLINE: In the America House, Amerikanski Dome,
we had two or three Russian women
who served our meals at the restaurant there.
One was called Tanya.
And she spoke very good English.
And her ears were wide open at all times,
listening to the conversations around those tables.
And we'd walk in and we'd say, "Do svidaniya, Tanya."
(LAUGHS)
MR. CELLA: In the Amerikanski Dom
was a nice looking woman who worked there
as a waitress and everything.
Tanya, her name was.
So I made a big spiel to her.
And all she said was, her response was, "You want soup?"
That's all I heard after that.
"Vince, do you want soup?"
MR. HOHMAN: We stayed initially at that time
at the so-called Amerikanski Dom, which was a housing area
separate from the embassy, but it was an embassy place.
We had food there that was served by a Russian,
a very, very interesting woman.
And some of the fellas tried to date her and so on,
and she would never budge and say, "Soup?
Vince, soup?
More soup for you?"
MR. VERREOS: The Amerikanski Dom, by the way,
was the social center for all of the diplomatic personnel
in Moscow.
Every night at Amerikanski Dom we
were showing some American movie.
So we always had a lot of the diplomatic corps would
be coming in to see the movie.
MR. KLINE: Once a week they held open house there
for the Western foreign embassies -
Brits, the Swedes, the Finns, whoever, Germans, for bingo.
One night there was a terrible noise out
on the side of this building toward the Moscow River.
And we all looked out and here it was,
the Russians practicing for their Independence Day
celebration - so-called Independence Day
celebration - in November, on the anniversary
of the Russian Revolution.
They rolled tanks by us.
They rolled armored cars by us.
They rolled great big huge guns on flatbed trucks,
and all kinds of stuff, making this clamorous
noise for a couple of hours,
practicing for the spontaneous demonstration
that was going to be two weeks later in Red Square.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
Later on when we lost our space in Amerikanski Dom,
we stayed in Russian hotels.
And there were women overseers on each of the floors.
I'm sure they kept sure that we didn't go anyplace.
Or if they did, they called somebody.
I'm sure of that.
I don't think - well, I don't know,
but I don't think I was followed up there.
I may have been, who knows?
I didn't worry about it.
They didn't want an incident and we didn't want one.
They wanted their couriers outside treated well,
and so they treated us.
Now, I don't know whether they followed us or not.
They probably did, but I wasn't looking for it
and I wasn't worried about it 'cause
I wasn't doing anything wrong.
MR. OLIVARES: Well, we knew in Moscow, definitely.
I don't know about the other countries behind the Curtain,
but definitely in Russia you knew
somebody was following you.
Yeah.
Wherever you went, somebody kept an eye on you.
Because you stood out too, in those days.
Your dress, for one thing.
Nobody bothered you, of course.
Most of them were rather surprised to meet an American.
It was a far off place they'd heard of,
but - Oh, Americans here?
They couldn't believe it.
If you were a foreigner, they thought
you were from the of their own satellite countries.
They'd look at you and say, [SPEAKING RUSSIAN] -
in their own language.
And you say, No, Amerikanski.
They couldn't believe it.
Those people?
As much as we would say on this side, Russians?
Communists here in New York?
Your job was to take care of those pouches.
But I don't think we ever felt that somebody was threatening us
or trying to steal them, but we always have to assume that.
And that's why you took care of them.
MR. HOHMAN: I know sometimes as a newcomer,
we were tailed by the KGB and so on.
They were all very curious as to what you were doing.
They figured that you were more than just a diplomatic courier.
Occasionally you were able to speak to some Russians,
but it was very difficult to do so.
I had an incident also, coming out of a hotel in Moscow
where a young fellow got a hold of me,
and he spoke English quite well.
And it turns out that he was born in Brooklyn, New York.
And I, having been born in New York,
I was familiar with the area where he was located.
And he said that as a teenager his father picked up the family
and went to Russia.
They were originally from Russia, the family.
And there was this call out - Come back to Mother Russia
and rebuild the country.
You have your obligation, even though you're
an overseas Russian, and so on.
So he did that, and took his entire family.
This young fellow that I was talking to,
he lived outside of the city of Moscow.
But he said that they had the authority,
they had to have internal passports
and it gave the authority that at least
once a year he could come to Moscow
and he could be able to see the Lenin-Stalin mausoleum and so on,
and other sites and places there.
So he asked me if I would do a favor for him.
And I said, "What's the favor?"
He says, "Help me get into the American Embassy."
I said, "Well, just walk into it."
He says, "No.
There are militia guards out there
and they would restrain me from coming in."
He said,"I'm trying to get back to the United States.
I don't like this country.
They regard me as a traitor.
I hardly speak Russian.
And so speaking, I feel I'm an American from Brooklyn."
And he had a Brooklyn-ese type accent, too.
Which surprised me, that he wasn't
able to get into the embassy.
He said, "No, no.
Militia guards won't let me go in there."
And he said, "I've tried a couple of times
and they stopped me."
And I said, "Well, I'm sorry.
I can't help you either."
So, whether a case of entrapment or so on, I don't know.
A very sympathetic sort of arrangement too,
that he didn't have access to go back to the place of his birth.
Because it's part of our basic nature to help others,
even though they are strangers.
MR. CELLA: But it was fun, Moscow.
You'd try to enjoy it, because we were in there a lot.
I couldn't wait to get back to Helsinki.
That's another thing.
On a train, the difference -
how you notice when you cross the border into Russia.
There was just unending ending trees, roads
with nobody on them.
But then you'd come back and then
cross the border into Finland -
nice little houses with the smoke
coming out of the chimneys.
Everything nice and clean.
Huge, huge difference.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
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