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Washington Hotels to Spread Like Mold Across Former Soviet Bloc

Washington Hotels to Spread Like Mold Across Former Soviet Bloc

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Welcome back to The Cary Harrison Files. We look at the conspicuous reboot of the Soviet Union by another name. We feature an exclusive video produced for the Russian Public.Why Upgrade? When government funding dries up, so does journalism that bites back. This weekly Substack is your last stop for unfiltered insight, irony, and the kind of reporting that refuses to kiss power’s ring. Corporate coffers can’t buy integrity, but your subscription can. Support this Substack and keep sharp, fearless commentary alive while polite PBS and public radio fade into a memory (the Corporation for Public Broadcasting will begin shutting down for the first time in its 57-year history). This Substack is where the conscience goes rogue: messy, satirical, and not beholden to anyone but the truth!Rebooting the Soviet UnionRussian TV’s return of Soviet Union anniversary video as giddy Washington rolls out red carpetWashington, in its eternal genius, has decided to roll out the red carpet for Vladimir Putin—right in Alaska. Yes, that Alaska. The one we bought from Russia for a handful of rubles and a barrel of whale oil, back when Andrew Johnson thought “manifest destiny” meant “free land grabs with complimentary snow.”Now, fast-forward a century and a half, and Washington’s decided to re-gift it—NATO soil, no less—like a drunken uncle returning the Christmas sweater he stole from you last year. Only this time, the sweater comes with oil fields, a strategic Arctic passage, and enough nuclear launch detection sites to make NORAD start Googling “cheap Airbnbs in Iowa.”Naturally, the official White House line is “diplomacy.” Which, in Washington-speak, translates roughly to: “we gave away the house keys and just hope they don't change the locks.” Meanwhile, NATO’s screaming into its croissants in Brussels, muttering something about Article 5 while Washington pats them on the head and says, “Relax, Vlad’s just here for the smoked salmon.”And as the shared empire expands … welcome to the grand unveiling of Washington’s latest export: luxury motels — now popping up like mushrooms after a Chernobyl rainstorm across the former Soviet territories. Belarus, Kazakhstan, Georgia… each one now proudly hosting a Washington Motel — or, as the brochures call it, “Five-Star Freedom on Loan.”These aren’t hotels, mind you. Hotels require class. These are motels — the kind where the ice machine’s broken, the carpet smells faintly of kompromat, and your room key doubles as a nondisclosure agreement.Every “Washington Motel” comes with complimentary cable news propaganda, a Bible signed by the highest bidder, and a 24-hour loyalty program for oligarchs. You get a rewards card after your first money-laundering seminar. Collect 10 stamps, and boom — you’re automatically an ambassador to NATO.The marketing tagline? “Because democracy sleeps here… for an hourly rate.”Putin, of course, gets the presidential suite. Kyiv gets a cot in the hallway. And somewhere in Moldova, a Washington Motel just went up next to a Soviet-era nuclear silo, complete with a rooftop bar called “The Fall of Empires.”But hey — don’t worry. Washington insists this is all “good for business,” and by “business,” they mean selling influence by the square foot. Freedom’s cheap these days, and the minibar isn’t stocked with champagne — just IOUs from whoever’s still pretending to run the State Department.Give it five years, and the old Soviet bloc will look like a continental rest stop, lined wall-to-wall with neon “Washington Motels” — where democracy’s always vacant, housekeeping doesn’t knock, and the checkout policy reads: “Stay as long as the rubles last.”Putin, of course, arrives shirtless, horseback, holding a gold-plated samovar, surveying the tundra like he’s returning a library book 150 years overdue. He calls it “a symbolic visit,” which is Kremlin code for: “we’re annexing this later, try the veal.” He even brought a measuring tape for the new drapes in Anchorage.And while the Pentagon assures us there’s “nothing to worry about,” you can practically hear NORAD in the background screaming into a pillow. Generals are running simulations, politicians are running from accountability, and somewhere deep in the Situation Room, someone just asked, “Remind me again… Alaska’s ours, right?”It gets better. Washington’s gift basket for Putin includes access to U.S. energy infrastructure, Arctic shipping lanes, and a polite little NATO clause that says, “By the way, if you invade, we technically have to nuke ourselves.” You couldn’t script this level of idiocy without winning an Emmy for dystopian comedy.But don’t worry. Washington insists this is all part of a “strategic partnership.” Which, translated back into English, means: “please don’t turn off our gas while Europe’s still thawing out.”So congratulations, America. ...
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