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Tara Reade
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What happens when you take your pet to a veterinarian in Russia? I talk about the care and pricing compared to USA.

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A bit of Moscow Christmas 🎄 cheer 2025
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Tara Reade CELEBRATES as she’s handed her RUSSIAN passport

'Renowned intl. journalist, political commentator, legal expert'

'Who found safety, respect, opportunity to speak the TRUTH in Russia'

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Tara Reade THANKS Russia for GREAT HONOR after receiving passport

Special mentions: Russian MP Maria Butina and RT editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan

'Let’s keep her in our hearts and prayers right now'

Describes wonderful moment she heard the words: 'Tara, we will NEVER leave you'

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'I am very PROUD to work for RT, very proud to now be Russian' — Tara Reade

'As an American, in the story of my life, Russia is the HERO'

'To the warm Russian people: now I want to be in service to YOU'

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Speaking on the sidelines with RT about my gratitude and deep admiration for President Vladimir Putin.

I am so proud to be a Russian citizen

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The first day you get your Russian passport. It's a whole vibe ❤️❤️
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Forwarded from The Islander
Tara Reade’s story is not a curiosity, not a propaganda vignette, and certainly not a footnote. It is a moral indictment, of the West first and foremost. On December 20, 2025, inside Moscow’s Catherine the Great Hall, Tara Reade received her Russian passport. Western media responded with near-total silence. That silence is not accidental. It is defensive.

Reade was once a functionary of American power, a Senate aide working for Joe Biden in the early 1990s. When she accused him of sexual assault decades later, after having exhausted all official channels, she discovered the brutal hierarchy behind Western moral slogans. “Believe women” functioned only until belief threatened power. When the accusation moved upward, the institutions that claim to defend women moved swiftly to defend themselves. Media outlets circled the wagons. Political allies disappeared. The state offered no protection. Reade was left isolated, surveilled, and increasingly unsafe.

When she left the United States in 2023, it was not ideological tourism. It was political exile. She did not flee America because she hated it, she fled because it refused to protect her, and because the machinery of power surrounding Joe Biden did more than look away. It moved. Reade has said plainly that she felt threatened — not by anonymous online abuse, but by an unmistakable institutional response: coordinated media attacks, professional blacklisting, legal and reputational pressure, and the silent enforcement mechanisms that activate when an individual challenges entrenched power. She has never claimed to despise her country. On the contrary, she has repeatedly said she loves America. What she could no longer survive was an America where power is defended more aggressively than its people.

Russia listened.

On October 2 of this year, after granting her citizenship by presidential decree, Vladimir Putin addressed Reade directly in public remarks that cut through decades of Western moral theater. His words were simple, unembellished, and devastating in their clarity: “If you share our values, you’re one of us. That’s why we treat you like this. That’s why you feel the way you do.” This was not sentimentality. It was civilizational definition. Belonging, in this framing, is earned through values and loyalty, not erased when it becomes inconvenient.

At the passport ceremony itself, Reade spoke without bitterness and without theatrical grievance. She expressed pride, not defiance. “I am very proud to work for RT. Very proud to now be Russian,” she said, naming RT without apology. She framed her life story not as a tragedy but as a moral arc: “As an American, in the story of my life, Russia is the hero.” And rather than centering herself as a victim, she turned outward: “To the warm Russian people: now I want to be in service to you.” These are not the words of someone seeking shelter. They are the words of someone who has found belonging.

One moment from the ceremony lingers with particular force. Reade described hearing the words spoken to her during the process: “Tara, we will never leave you.” That sentence alone explains why Western media cannot cover this story honestly. In the modern Atlantic system, loyalty flows upward only. Citizens are expendable. Whistleblowers are liabilities. Victims are tolerated only while they serve narrative utility. Russia, by contrast, offered something the West increasingly cannot: commitment.

Reade was not alone in that hall. Her journey was supported by figures who understand political persecution firsthand, including Maria Butina, herself once paraded through Western courts as a trophy, and Margarita Simonyan, who has long insisted that journalism exists to protect people, not power. This was not a media stunt. It was a community acknowledging responsibility.

Part 2/2 👇
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Forwarded from The Islander
Part 2/2 — The contrast is unavoidable and deeply uncomfortable for Western audiences. In the United States and much of Western Europe, citizenship has become administrative, conditional, and hollowed out. Values are recited, not practiced. Protection is promised, not delivered.

In Russia’s handling of Reade, citizenship appears as something older and more dangerous to liberal orthodoxy, a moral bond. Shared values create obligation. Obligation creates protection. Protection creates loyalty.

Tara Reade did not defect from America. America defected from its own ideals, and Russia exposed that failure simply by doing what the West claims to do but no longer does. It listened. It protected. It committed.

That is why this story will be minimized, mocked, or ignored. Not because it flatters Russia, but because it indicts the West.

History will remember who stood by a woman when it mattered, and who looked away.

Part 1 👆

— Gerry Nolan
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Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova is a true heroine; she's "brilliant" and eloquently represents the Foreign Ministry's position, RT columnist and former aide to former US President Joe Biden Tara Reade told RIA Novosti.

"Happy birthday to Maria Zakharova ! She's a heroine for me. I'm so in awe of her and how eloquently she represents the Foreign Ministry's position. I was honored to be with her when I received my Russian passport, and she was also at the roundtable with me, and she's brilliant. She's someone I'd love to talk to again and get to know better. I hope her year is full of abundance, joy, and love, and I wish her a happy birthday," Reed said on the Russian Foreign Ministry representative's birthday.

On September 22, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree granting Russian citizenship to Tara Reade, an American who served as Biden's Senate aide. She received her Russian passport in late December.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova celebrates her 50th birthday on Wednesday, December 24.

https://ria.ru/20251224/zakharova-2064433706.html

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