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Increasing Momentum Around Tech Policy
Strong government policies and leadership are key to making the Internet a global public resource that is open and accessible to all.
To advance this work from the front lines, some of the world’s experts on these issues joined government service. These dedicated public servants have made major progress in recent years on issues like net neutrality, open data and the digital economy.
But as governments transition and government leaders move on, we risk losing momentum or even backsliding on progress made. To sustain that momentum and invest in those leaders, today the Mozilla Foundation officially launches a new Tech Policy Fellowship. The program is designed to give individuals with deep expertise in government and Internet policy the support and structure they need to continue their Internet health work.
The fellows, who hail from around the globe, will spend the next year working independently on a range of tech policy issues. They will collaborate closely with Mozilla’s policy and advocacy teams, as well as the broader Mozilla network and other key organizations in tech policy. Each fellow will bring their expertise to important topics currently at issue in the United States and around the world.
For example:
Fellow Gigi Sohn brings nearly 30 years of experience, most recently at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), dedicated to defending and preserving fundamental competition and innovation policies for broadband Internet access. At a time when we are moving closer to a closed Internet in the United States, her expertise is more valuable than ever.
Fellow Alan Davidson will draw on his extensive professional history working to advance a free and open digital economy to support his work on education and advocacy strategies to combat Internet policy risks.
With the wave of data collection and use fast growing in government and the private sector, fellow Linet Kwamboka will analyze East African government practices for the collection, handling and publishing of data. She will develop contextual best practices for data governance and management.
Meet the initial cohort of the Tech Policy Fellows here and below, and keep an eye on the Tech Policy Fellowship website for ways to collaborate in this work.
Our Mozilla Tech Policy Fellows
Alan Davidson | @abdavdson
Alan will work to produce a census of major Internet policy risks and will engage in advocacy and educational strategy to minimize those risks. Alan is also a Fellow at New America in Washington, D.C. Until January 2017, he served as the first Director of Digital Economy at the U.S. Department of Commerce and a Senior Advisor to the Secretary of Commerce. Prior to joining the department, Davidson was the director of the Open Technology Institute at New America. Earlier, Davidson opened Google’s Washington policy office in 2005 and led the company’s public policy and government relations efforts in North and South America. He was previously Associate Director of the Center for Democracy and Technology. Alan has a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and computer science and a master’s degree in technology and policy from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). He is a graduate of Yale Law School.

Credit: New America
Amina Fazlullah will work to promote policies that support broadband connectivity in rural and vulnerable communities in the United States. Amina joins the fellowship from her most recent role as Policy Advisor to the National Digital Inclusion Alliance, where she led efforts to develop policies that support broadband deployment, digital inclusion, and digital equity efforts across the United States. Amina has worked on a broad range of Internet policy issues including Universal Service, consumer protection, antitrust, net neutrality, spectrum policy and children’s online privacy. She has testified before Congress, the Federal Communications Commission, the Department of Commerce and Federal Trade Commission. Amina was formerly the Benton Foundation’s Director of Policy in Washington, D.C., where she worked to further government policies to address communication needs of vulnerable communities. Before that, Amina worked with the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, for the Honorable Chief Judge James M. Rosenbaum of the U.S. District Court of Minnesota and at the Federal Communications Commission. She is graduate of the University of Minnesota Law School and Pennsylvania State University.
Camille Fischer | @camfisch
Camille will be working to promote individual rights to privacy, security and free speech on the Internet. In the last year of the Obama Administration, Camille led the National Economic Council’s approach to consumers’ economic and civil rights on the Internet and in emerging technologies. She represented consumers’ voices in discussions with other federal agencies regarding law enforcement access to data, including encryption and international law enforcement agreements. She has run commercial privacy and security campaigns, like the BuySecure Initiative to increase consumers’ financial security, and also worked to promote an economic voice within national security policy and to advocate for due process protections within surveillance and digital access reform. Before entering the government as a Presidential Management Fellow, Camille graduated from Georgetown University Law Center where she wrote state legislation for the privacy-protective commercial use of facial recognition technology. Camille is also an amateur photographer in D.C.
Caroline will be working to to promote a healthy internet by exploring current competition issues related to the Internet ecosystem. Caroline served most recently as Chief Counsel for Competition Policy and Intergovernmental Relations at the U.S. Department of Justice Antitrust Division. In that role, she was involved in several high-profile matters while overseeing the Division’s competition policy and advocacy efforts, interagency policy initiatives, and congressional relations. Caroline previously served as Chief Counsel and Staff Director of the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee where she advised the committee chairmen on a wide variety of competition issues related to telecommunications, technology and intellectual property. Before taking on this role, she was a counsel on the Senate Judiciary Committee and an attorney in private practice focusing on public policy and regulatory work. Caroline holds a J.D. from Georgetown University Law Center and a B.A. in Public Policy from Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut. Between college and law school, Caroline served in the Antitrust Division as an honors paralegal and as Clerk of the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee.
Linet Kwamboka | @linetdata
Linet will work on understanding the policies that guide data collection and dissemination in East Africa (Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda). Through this, she aims to publish policy recommendations on existing policies, proposed policy amendments and a report outlining her findings. Linet is the Founder and CEO of DataScience LTD, which builds information systems to generate and use data to discover intelligent insights about people, products and services for resource allocation and decision making. She was previously the Kenya Open Data Initiative Project Coordinator for the Government of Kenya at the Kenya ICT Authority. Linet is also a director of the World Data Lab–Africa, working to make data personal, tangible and actionable to help citizens make better informed choices about their lives. She also consults with the UNDP in the Strengthening Electoral Processes in Kenya Project, offering support to the Independent Electoral Boundaries Commission in information systems and technology. She has worked at the World Bank as a GIS and Technology Consultant and was a Software Engineering Fellow at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh. Her background is in computer science, data analysis and Geographical Information Systems. Linet is a recognized unsung hero by the American Embassy in Kenya in her efforts to encourage more women into technology and computing, has been a finalist in the Bloomberg award of global open data champions and is a member of the Open Data Institute Global Open Data Leaders’ Network.
Terah Lyons | @terahlyons
Terah will work on advancing policy and governance around the future of machine intelligence, with a specific focus on coordination in international governance of AI. Her work targets questions related to the responsible development and deployment of AI and machine learning, including how society can minimize the risks of AI while maximizing its benefits, and what AI development and advanced automation means for humankind across cultural and political boundaries. Terah is a former Policy Advisor to the U.S. Chief Technology Officer in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP). She most recently led a policy portfolio in the Obama Administration focused on machine intelligence, including AI, robotics, and intelligent transportation systems. In her work at OSTP, Terah helped establish and direct the White House Future of Artificial Intelligence Initiative, oversaw robotics policy and regulatory matters, led the Administration’s work from the White House on civil and commercial unmanned aircraft systems/drone integration into the U.S. airspace system, and advised on Federal automated vehicles policy. She also advised on issues related to diversity and inclusion in the technology industry and entrepreneurial ecosystem. Prior to her work at the White House, Terah was a Fellow with the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences based in Cape Town, South Africa. She is a graduate of Harvard University, where she currently sits on the Board of Directors of the Harvard Alumni Association.
Marilia will be analyzing consumer protection and competition policy to contribute to the development of sustainable public policies and innovation. From 2013-15, she was Policy Manager at the Brazilian Ministry of Justice’s Consumer Office coordinating public policies for the consumer protection in digital markets and law enforcement actions targeting ISP and Internet application. She has researched the intersection between innovation technologies and society in different areas: current democratic innovations in Latin America regarding e-participation at the Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung and the development of public policies on health privacy and data protection at the “Privacy Brazil” project with the Internet Lab in partnership with Ford Foundation in Brazil. She is a board member at Coding Rights, a Brazilian-born, women-led, think-and-do tank and active in Internet Governance fora. Marilia holds a Master in Public Policy from the Hertie School of Governance in Berlin focusing on policy analysis, a bachelor in Law from Fundação Getulio Vargas School of Law in Rio de Janeiro and specialises in digital rights.
Jason Schultz | @lawgeek
Jason will analyze the impacts and effects of new technologies such as artificial intelligence/machine learning and the Internet of Things through the lenses of consumer protection, civil liberties, innovation, and competition. His research aims to help policymakers navigate these important legal concerns while still allowing for open innovation and for competition to thrive. Jason is a Professor of Clinical Law, Director of NYU’s Technology Law & Policy Clinic, and Co-Director of the Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy. His clinical projects, research, and writing primarily focus on the ongoing struggles to balance traditional areas of law such as intellectual property, consumer protection, and privacy with the public interest in free expression, access to knowledge, civil rights, and innovation in light of new technologies and the challenges they pose. During the 2016-2017 academic year, Jason was on leave at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, where he served as Senior Advisor on Innovation and Intellectual Property to former U.S. Chief Technology Officer Megan Smith. With Aaron Perzanowski, he is the author of The End of Ownership: Personal Property in the Digital Economy (MIT Press 2016), which argues for retaining consumer property rights in a marketplace that increasingly threatens them. Prior to joining NYU, Jason was an Assistant Clinical Professor of Law and Director of the Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy Clinic at the UC Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall). Before joining Boalt Hall, he was a Senior Staff Attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation and before that practiced intellectual property law at the firm of Fish & Richardson, PC. He also served as a clerk to the Honorable D. Lowell Jensen of the Northern District of California. He is a member of the American Law Institute.
Gigi Sohn | @gigibsohn
Gigi will be working to promote an open Internet in the United States. She is one of the nation’s leading public advocates for open, affordable, and democratic communications networks. Gigi is also a Distinguished Fellow at the Georgetown Law Institute for Technology Law & Policy and an Open Society Foundations Leadership in Government Fellow. For nearly 30 years, Gigi has worked across the United States to defend and preserve the fundamental competition and innovation policies that have made broadband Internet access more ubiquitous, competitive, affordable, open, and protective of user privacy. Most recently, Gigi was Counselor to the former Chairman of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission, Tom Wheeler, who she advised on a wide range of Internet, telecommunications and media issues. Gigi was named by the Daily Dot in 2015 as one of the “Heroes Who Saved the Internet” in recognition of her role in the FCC’s adoption of the strongest-ever net neutrality rules. Gigi co-founded and served as CEO of Public Knowledge, the leading communications policy advocacy organization. She was previously a Project Specialist in the Ford Foundation’s Media, Arts and Culture unit and Executive Director of the Media Access Project, the first public interest law firm in the communications space. Gigi holds a B.S. in Broadcasting and Film, Summa Cum Laude, from the Boston University College of Communication and a J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania Law School.
Cori Zarek | @corizarek
Cori is the Senior Fellow leading the Tech Policy Fellows team and serving as a liaison with the Mozilla Foundation. Her work as a fellow will focus on the intersection of tech policy and transparency. Before joining Mozilla, Cori was Deputy U.S. Chief Technology Officer at the White House where she led the team’s work to build a more digital, open, and collaborative government. Cori also coordinated U.S. involvement with the global Open Government Partnership, a 75-country initiative driving greater transparency and accountability around the world. Previously, she was an attorney at the U.S. National Archives, working on open government and freedom of information policy. Before joining the U.S. government, Cori was the Freedom of Information Director at The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press where she assisted journalists with legal issues, and she also practiced for a Washington law firm. Cori received her B.A. from the University of Iowa where she was editor of the student-run newspaper, The Daily Iowan. Cori also received her J.D. from the University of Iowa where she wrote for the Iowa Law Review and The Des Moines Register. She was inducted into the Freedom of Information Hall of Fame in 2016. Cori is also the President of the D.C. Open Government Coalition and teaches a media law class at American University.
The post Increasing Momentum Around Tech Policy appeared first on The Mozilla Blog.
New Mozilla Poll: Americans from Both Political Parties Overwhelmingly Support Net Neutrality
There’s something that Americans of varied political affiliations — Democrats, Republicans and Independents — largely agree on: the need to protect net neutrality.
A recent public opinion poll carried out by Mozilla and Ipsos revealed overwhelming support across party lines for net neutrality, with over three quarters of Americans (76%) supporting net neutrality. Eighty-one percent of Democrats and 73% of Republicans are in favor of it.

Another key finding: Most Americans do not trust the U.S. government to protect access to the Internet. Seventy percent of Americans place no or little trust in the Trump administration or Congress (78%) to do so.
Mozilla and Ipsos carried out the poll in late May, on the heels of the FCC’s vote to begin dismantling Obama-era net neutrality rules. We polled approximately 1,000 American adults across the U.S., a sample that included 354 Democrats, 344 Republicans, and 224 Independents.
At Mozilla, we believe net neutrality is integral to a healthy Internet: it enables Americans to say, watch and make what they want online, without meddling or interference from ISPs (Internet Service Providers, such as AT&T, Verizon, and Time Warner). Net neutrality is fundamental to free speech, competition, innovation and choice online.
As you may have seen, the FCC has proposed rolling back net neutrality protections that were enacted in 2015, and will collect public comments on net neutrality through August 18th. Then, hopefully drawing on those comments, the FCC will vote whether to adopt the order and strip their ability to create net neutrality rules.
In the coming months, Mozilla will continue to work with the majority of Americans who endorse net neutrality. We will directly engage with key policymakers. We will continue our advocacy work — like our net neutrality petition, which has garnered more than 100,000 signatures and over 50 hours of voicemail messages for the FCC (just a few of the almost five million comments on the order). And Mozilla will participate in the July 12 Day of Action, joining Fight for the Future, Free Press, Demand Progress and others to call for all Internet users to defend net neutrality.
Below, more key findings from the poll:
— Respondents across the political spectrum (78%) believe that equal access to the Internet is a right, with large majorities of Democrats (88%), Independents (71%), and Republicans (67%) in agreement
— Respondents have little trust in government institutions to protect their access to the Internet. The highest levels of distrust were reported for the Trump administration (70%), Congress (78%) and the FCC (58%)
— When it comes to corporations protecting access to the Internet, 54% of respondents distrust ISPs
— Americans view net neutrality as having a positive impact on most of society. Respondents said it is a “good thing” for small businesses (70%), individuals (69%), innovators (65%) and ISPs (55%), but fewer think that it will benefit big businesses (46%)
Below, the full results from our poll.
Q1. How much do you trust the following institutions, if at all, to protect your access to the internet?ISPs (Internet service providers, such as AT&T, Verizon, Time Warner, etc.)
Total Democrat Republican Independent Trust completely 9% 9% 10% 8% Mostly trust 35% 38% 39% 27% Trust a little bit 38% 38% 37% 37% Do not trust at all 16% 12% 13% 26% Don’t know 3% 3% 2% 2%The Trump Administration
Total Democrat Republican Independent Trust completely 10% 5% 21% 6% Mostly trust 15% 4% 31% 14% Trust a little bit 20% 10% 31% 24% Do not trust at all 50% 78% 15% 46% Don’t know 5% 2% 3% 9%The Federal Communications Commission
Total Democrat Republican Independent Trust completely 6% 7% 9% 3% Mostly trust 28% 30% 32% 21% Trust a little bit 34% 34% 35% 37% Do not trust at all 24% 21% 16% 32% Don’t know 9% 8% 8% 7%Internet Companies
Total Democrat Republican Independent Trust completely 8% 6% 11% 7% Mostly trust 29% 34% 33% 21% Trust a little bit 44% 43% 42% 42% Do not trust at all 16% 12% 12% 28% Don’t know 4% 4% 2% 1%Congress
Total Democrat Republican Independent Trust completely 6% 6% 8% 3% Mostly trust 13% 13% 16% 10% Trust a little bit 34% 37% 35% 30% Do not trust at all 44% 41% 38% 52% Don’t know 4% 3% 3% 5% Q2. Which of the following statements do you agree more with? Total Democrat Republican Independent Consumers should be able to freely and quickly access their preferred content on the internet 86% 88% 81% 85% ISPs should be able to offer fast lanes with quicker load times to websites that pay a premium 14% 12% 19% 15% Q3. Based on all the things you know or have heard, do you support or oppose net neutrality?(Note: Participants saw net neutrality defined as: “Net neutrality is the principle that internet service providers providing consumer connection to the Internet should treat all data on the internet the same, not giving specific advantages or penalties in access by user, content, website, platform, or application.”)
Total Democrat Republican Independent Strongly support 30% 35% 25% 29% Somewhat support 46% 46% 48% 42% Somewhat oppose 20% 17% 20% 24% Strongly oppose 4% 2% 6% 5% Q4. Do you think that net neutrality is a good thing or a bad thing for the following groups?Small businesses
Total Democrat Republican Independent Bad thing 9% 9% 10% 10% Good thing 70% 68% 75% 72% Makes no difference 21% 23% 15% 18%Big business
Total Democrat Republican Independent Bad thing 21% 29% 15% 20% Good thing 46% 41% 53% 50% Makes no difference 33% 30% 32% 31%Innovators
Total Democrat Republican Independent Bad thing 10% 10% 11% 12% Good thing 65% 68% 64% 64% Makes no difference 25% 22% 25% 24%Internet service providers
Total Democrat Republican Independent Bad thing 18% 20% 18% 20% Good thing 55% 55% 60% 55% Makes no difference 26% 25% 22% 25%People like me
Total Democrat Republican Independent Bad thing 8% 6% 9% 11% Good thing 69% 70% 70% 68% Makes no difference 23% 24% 21% 21% Q5. To what extent do you agree or disagree with the following statements?Internet services providers will voluntarily look out for consumers’ best interests
Total Democrat Republican Independent Strongly agree 11% 12% 10% 11% Somewhat agree 26% 28% 28% 21% Somewhat disagree 33% 32% 35% 33% Strongly disagree 26% 22% 26% 33% Don’t know 4% 6% 2% 3%Equal access to the internet is a right
Total Democrat Republican Independent Strongly agree 41% 52% 27% 44% Somewhat agree 37% 36% 40% 31% Somewhat disagree 10% 6% 17% 9% Strongly disagree 8% 3% 13% 9% Don’t know 4% 3% 3% 7%About the Study
These are findings from an Ipsos poll conducted May 24-25, 2017 on behalf of Mozilla. For the survey, a sample of roughly 1,008 adults age 18+ from the continental U.S., Alaska and Hawaii was interviewed online in English. The sample includes 354 Democrats, 344 Republicans, and 224 Independents.
The sample for this study was randomly drawn from Ipsos’s online panel (see link below for more info on “Access Panels and Recruitment”), partner online panel sources, and “river” sampling (see link below for more info on the Ipsos “Ampario Overview” sample method) and does not rely on a population frame in the traditional sense. Ipsos uses fixed sample targets, unique to each study, in drawing sample. After a sample has been obtained from the Ipsos panel, Ipsos calibrates respondent characteristics to be representative of the U.S. Population using standard procedures such as raking-ratio adjustments. The source of these population targets is U.S. Census 2013 American Community Survey data. The sample drawn for this study reflects fixed sample targets on demographics. Post-hoc weights were made to the population characteristics on gender, age, race/ethnicity, region, and education.
Statistical margins of error are not applicable to online polls. All sample surveys and polls may be subject to other sources of error, including, but not limited to coverage error and measurement error. Where figures do not sum to 100, this is due to the effects of rounding. The precision of Ipsos online polls is measured using a credibility interval. In this case, the poll has a credibility interval of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points for all respondents. Ipsos calculates a design effect (DEFF) for each study based on the variation of the weights, following the formula of Kish (1965). This study had a credibility interval adjusted for design effect of the following (n=1,008, DEFF=1.5, adjusted Confidence Interval=5.0).
The poll also has a credibility interval plus or minus 5.9 percentage points for Democrats, plus or minus 6.0 percentage points for Republicans, and plus or minus 7.5 percentage points for Independents.
For more information about conducting research intended for public release or Ipsos’ online polling methodology, please visit our Public Opinion Polling and Communication page where you can download our brochure, see our public release protocol, or contact us.
The post New Mozilla Poll: Americans from Both Political Parties Overwhelmingly Support Net Neutrality appeared first on The Mozilla Blog.
Медведев стал главным развлечением для посетителей RAE
Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain
Кодзиму хоть и уволили до завершения проекта, но он, конечно, мега-монстр.
Видеоролик - спойлерный.
Смотреть осторожно!
Закупить MGS V в проверенном месте
Молдавский пар и европейский свисток
Добиванием – в смысле использования всех известных технологических приемов, в первую очередь многодневного и целенаправленного уличного давления. После того, как коммунисты отказались от радикальной критики режима, их протестную эстафету, включая сами лозунги, подхватили другие левые партии. Менее эффектно, но не менее беззубо в части трансформации протестов в режим нон-стоп.
В данном случае главным является то, что запрос на протест в молдавском обществе безусловно существует. Его социальная база достаточно широка. Она включает в себя сегодня вчерашних избирателей как левых, так и правых партий. От жителей сел до горожан. Недовольны все. И это мягко сказано. Молдавский пар и европейский свисток
Синий Фил 135: Голливуд в опасности – интерактивное кино наступает!
В этом выпуске:
- Хичкок как прародитель интерактивных фильмов;
- эффект бабочки, пилы и оленей;
- как «Дожить до рассвета»?
Спасти молодежь от маньяка
Про королеву Британии
В праздничный день королева в сопровождении супруга, герцога Эдинбургского, предпримет двухчасовое путешествие на поезде из Эдинбурга до Твидбэнка. В конечной точке пути, как ожидается, королева выступит с речью и поблагодарит своих подданных за доверие, оказываемое ей на протяжении рекордного срока. Королева почтит память своей прапрабабушки Виктории. Елизавета II достигла рекорда продолжительности правления
А два президентских срока - это тирания и диктатура.
Барак Обама доел лосося за медведем
Ведущий телевизионного шоу Беар Гриллз преподнёс американскому президенту наполовину съеденную тушку лосося.
На вопрос Обамы, почему медведь не съел рыбу до конца, ведущий ответил, что эти животные предпочитают есть лишь самые жирные куски лосося. Барак Обама доел лосося за медведем
Не дай бог так оголодать.
Скайуокер и геи
«Вы не относитесь к Альянсу повстанцев. Вы не крутые парни. Вы чертовы жестокие тоталитарные империалисты. Если вы думаете, что Люка Скайуокера могут раздражать геи вокруг него, то вы полностью упустили смысл "Звездных войн"», — отметил Вендиг. Он призвал возмущающихся фанатов присоединиться к Альянсу, в котором, по его словам, есть любовь, отличная музыка и милые дроиды.
Роман «Звездные войны: Последствия» поступил в продажу 4 сентября. Многие поклонники киноэпопеи выразили недовольство по поводу героя Синджира Рата Велуса — имперского перебежчика и гомосексуала, представленного положительным персонажем. Писатель рассказал об отношении Люка Скайуокера к геям
Оказывается, у них есть смысл.
Вот это поворот!!!
Дерзкий побег из детсада
Воспитанники старшей группы исчезли во время вечерней прогулки. Совершенно одни они прошагали почти два километра, а затем перешли проезжую часть на перекрестке с оживленным движением.
Воспитатель обнаружила пропажу детей только через полчаса. Она сообщила о происшествии в полицию, начальству и родителям сбежавших мальчиков. Поднятые по тревоге патрули полиции бросились прочесывать район.
Беглецов неподалеку от автосалона «Ягуар» заприметила неравнодушная девушка. Она догнала детей и стала их расспрашивать. Те заявили, что идут из детского сада покупать машину, но денег у них нет. Горожанка посадила детсадовцев в свою машину и привезла их в Орджоникидзевский отдел полиции.
Как рассказали «Комсомолке» сотрудники садика, к побегу мальчики готовились заранее. Несколько дней подряд во время прогулок они рыли под забором углубление детскими совочками. Родители беглецов написали отказ от претензий к детскому саду. Тем не менее, педагогов, недосмотревших за малышами, наказали.
«Это считается очень серьезным нарушением. Воспитатель, допустившая пропажу своих воспитанников, уволена, а исполняющей обязанности заведующей детсадом вынесено дисциплинарное взыскание», – заявила и.о. начальника отдела организации дошкольного образования администрации Магнитогорска Ольга Денисенко. Двое дошколят сбежали из садика в Магнитогорске через подкоп под забором
Пластическая хирургия и обрез
Судя по видеозаписи, которую уже изъяла полиция, Лебедев поднялся в кабинет замглавного врача по хирургии Александра Ремизова, достал по пути ружье "Вепрь". Почти сразу выстрелил медику в область сердца, потом – в дверь. Третий выстрел предназначался для самого себя, в голову.
Представитель клинической больницы Владимир Запорожец сообщил, что состояние Ремизова крайне тяжелое. Лебедев скончался. Отомстил за пластику носа
А был бы у всех докторов короткоствол - всё сложилось бы иначе.
Вооружённые люди - вежливые люди.
Опергеймер 69: Metal Gear Solid V, Mad Max, Halo Online, Gears of War Ultimate Edition
MGS V и другие игры для состоятельных парней
В этом выпуске:
- Metal Gear Solid V – последнее дело Змия;
- паровые гномы Arkanum;
- горькие слезы лысого убийцы, спартанцы и картонные ковбои.
Среди тех, кто отпишет комментарии к этой новости, будут разыграны 10 копий Arkanum. Комментируйте новость, подписывайтесь на канал YouTube, и у вас будет шанс получить ключ по почте.
Игра Бэнг
Другие видео о настольных играх
Arcanum без глюков
Олег Зотов и Nikon
Фотошкола Олега Зотова
Голосую, чтобы выразить свою политическую волю
– На мой сайт, где я свою точку зрения излагаю, в месяц заходят около двух миллионов посетителей, – значит, то, что я говорю, людям интересно, в том числе, – о событиях на Украине. Но есть и другое явление. Есть люди, которые занимаются обсуждением этой темы за деньги и продвигают, в том числе, интересы иностранных государств, каким бы печальным и странным это не казалось. В Интернете активность данных граждан достаточно высока. Оппозиция, безусловно, нужна и должна быть, но она должна желать родной стране благополучия, а не тотального уничтожения.
Есть и те, у кого созерцательная позиция. Ну, вот – достаточно долго созерцали происходящее на Украине. Люди, более-менее сообразительные, в том числе, и я, хором говорили, что сейчас придут к власти откровенные нацисты, а дальше начнётся война. В ответ было: «О чём вы говорите, такого не может быть». Однако, нацисты к власти пришли, государственный переворот совершили, гражданскую войну на Украине устроили. А страдает, в первую очередь, мирное население… Голосую, чтобы выразить свою политическую волю
Про журналиста Кашина
А с чего это вдруг такое внезапное доверие тоталитарной системе?
Общеизвестно ведь - там никого не ищут, хватают кого попало и сажают ни за что.
С чего это вдруг всё стало иначе?




