This document appears to be a collection of memories from the author's childhood with their father. The memories describe various international locations and situations including: 1) Traveling to ski resorts and shops with the family. 2) Being in a fast car with gunfire and hiding in a tunnel. 3) Being in a park where people were "sleeping" which may have been during a revolution. 4) The father making stops to kill someone and leaving in a hurry. 5) A boat trip in Vietnam where the father said fireworks were just fireworks. 6) Paddle boating with the family and finding a gun on an island. 7) Hiding in parks and houses from people the father was chasing to kill.
This document discusses two opposing views on the United States' relationship with international law and institutions like the International Criminal Court. One view is that the US fails to uphold the same human rights standards it demands of other countries. The other view is that powerful democracies like the US have a right to intervene militarily without UN approval to spread democracy, as with NATO actions in Kosovo and Serbia. The document argues the US damages its credibility by resisting international oversight and that world peace requires subjecting all countries, including the US, to international criminal law.
This document is a CV that summarizes the author's extensive experience traveling throughout Asia, which provided an understanding of international relations. Some key experiences include witnessing oppressed conditions in less developed countries. The author is interested in enhancing diplomacy between the US and Bosnia/Yugoslavia, advocating for human rights, and resolving conflicts peacefully. Areas of study include economics, geography, languages, cultures, foreign relations, and theology in relation to world peace. The goal is to prevent future conflicts by understanding past events and respecting other cultures.
This document provides a summary of the annual command history of the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM) for fiscal year 1993. It describes INSCOM's mission, organization, command relationships, and key events and issues around resource management. Specifically, it outlines INSCOM's organizational structure, personnel strengths and challenges, budget and funding issues, and initiatives regarding ethics, affirmative action, and reserve affairs. Redactions and classification exemptions have been applied to some information in the document.
What It’s Like to Chill Out With Whom the Rest of the World Considers As The ...Jill Starr
The document describes the author's experience meeting and socializing with alleged war criminals from the Yugoslav wars, including Ratko Mladic and Nikola Sainovic. After being dismissed from her graduate program for her views on NATO's intervention in Kosovo, the author became friends with Darko Trifunovic of the Bosnian mission to the UN. Through this connection, she had opportunities to interact with high-level political figures from the region and gained access to closed UN meetings, despite not having proper credentials. She reflects on the divided ethnic politics still evident among members of the Bosnian mission in New York.
This summary provides the high level information from the document in 3 sentences:
The document discusses Benedict Anderson's theory of nationalism as presented in his book "Imagined Communities" and compares it to Partha Chatterjee's view of non-Western nationalism, specifically looking at how their theories apply to Indian nationalism in response to British colonial rule. While Anderson's view focuses on Western European nationalism, Chatterjee examines how Indian nationalists employed their own non-Western discourse and tools like language and print to develop a nationalist movement and ultimately gain independence from Britain. The document analyzes where their theories align and disagree, particularly in explaining the success and failures of the Indian national project in establishing a post-colonial democratic
The document describes a female war crimes investigator's experience meeting with and socializing with Ratko Mladic, one of the alleged perpetrators of genocide in the Yugoslav wars. It details how she came to be dismissed from graduate school for her views on NATO's intervention in Kosovo. She became friends with Darko Trifunovic, a Serbian diplomat, and did work with him at the Bosnian mission to the UN. Through this connection, she found herself attending a closed meeting at the UN that she was not authorized to enter, where she witnessed debates around establishing an international criminal court.
This document appears to be a collection of memories from the author's childhood with their father. The memories describe various international locations and situations including: 1) Traveling to ski resorts and shops with the family. 2) Being in a fast car with gunfire and hiding in a tunnel. 3) Being in a park where people were "sleeping" which may have been during a revolution. 4) The father making stops to kill someone and leaving in a hurry. 5) A boat trip in Vietnam where the father said fireworks were just fireworks. 6) Paddle boating with the family and finding a gun on an island. 7) Hiding in parks and houses from people the father was chasing to kill.
This document discusses two opposing views on the United States' relationship with international law and institutions like the International Criminal Court. One view is that the US fails to uphold the same human rights standards it demands of other countries. The other view is that powerful democracies like the US have a right to intervene militarily without UN approval to spread democracy, as with NATO actions in Kosovo and Serbia. The document argues the US damages its credibility by resisting international oversight and that world peace requires subjecting all countries, including the US, to international criminal law.
This document is a CV that summarizes the author's extensive experience traveling throughout Asia, which provided an understanding of international relations. Some key experiences include witnessing oppressed conditions in less developed countries. The author is interested in enhancing diplomacy between the US and Bosnia/Yugoslavia, advocating for human rights, and resolving conflicts peacefully. Areas of study include economics, geography, languages, cultures, foreign relations, and theology in relation to world peace. The goal is to prevent future conflicts by understanding past events and respecting other cultures.
This document provides a summary of the annual command history of the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM) for fiscal year 1993. It describes INSCOM's mission, organization, command relationships, and key events and issues around resource management. Specifically, it outlines INSCOM's organizational structure, personnel strengths and challenges, budget and funding issues, and initiatives regarding ethics, affirmative action, and reserve affairs. Redactions and classification exemptions have been applied to some information in the document.
What It’s Like to Chill Out With Whom the Rest of the World Considers As The ...Jill Starr
The document describes the author's experience meeting and socializing with alleged war criminals from the Yugoslav wars, including Ratko Mladic and Nikola Sainovic. After being dismissed from her graduate program for her views on NATO's intervention in Kosovo, the author became friends with Darko Trifunovic of the Bosnian mission to the UN. Through this connection, she had opportunities to interact with high-level political figures from the region and gained access to closed UN meetings, despite not having proper credentials. She reflects on the divided ethnic politics still evident among members of the Bosnian mission in New York.
This summary provides the high level information from the document in 3 sentences:
The document discusses Benedict Anderson's theory of nationalism as presented in his book "Imagined Communities" and compares it to Partha Chatterjee's view of non-Western nationalism, specifically looking at how their theories apply to Indian nationalism in response to British colonial rule. While Anderson's view focuses on Western European nationalism, Chatterjee examines how Indian nationalists employed their own non-Western discourse and tools like language and print to develop a nationalist movement and ultimately gain independence from Britain. The document analyzes where their theories align and disagree, particularly in explaining the success and failures of the Indian national project in establishing a post-colonial democratic
The document describes a female war crimes investigator's experience meeting with and socializing with Ratko Mladic, one of the alleged perpetrators of genocide in the Yugoslav wars. It details how she came to be dismissed from graduate school for her views on NATO's intervention in Kosovo. She became friends with Darko Trifunovic, a Serbian diplomat, and did work with him at the Bosnian mission to the UN. Through this connection, she found herself attending a closed meeting at the UN that she was not authorized to enter, where she witnessed debates around establishing an international criminal court.
Concentration Camps Prisons Camps and Sex Slavery in BosniaJill Starr
This document summarizes information about concentration camps, prisons, and brothels established during the conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the 1990s. It lists over 50 specific locations across Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Serbia where Serbs were imprisoned in concentration camps, including the estimated number of prisoners held at each location. It also lists over a dozen locations where Serb women were held as sex slaves in brothels established by Bosnian Muslim and Croatian forces. The document alleges widespread abuse, torture, and killing of Serb civilians in these camps and prisons throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Serbia during this time period.
Donald trump’s soviet russian mafia money laundering story as i eye witnessed...Jill Starr
Donald trump’s soviet russian mafia money laundering story as i eye witnessed it when my father was an anti soviet spy investigating trump for the cia back in 1969 1975
The document discusses the history and development of artificial intelligence over the past 70 years. It outlines some of the key milestones in AI research from the early work in the 1950s to modern advances in deep learning. While progress has been made, fully general artificial intelligence that can match or exceed human levels of intelligence is still an ongoing challenge that researchers are working to achieve.
1. The document discusses Charles Taylor's concept of "genuine respect" for different cultures and individuals.
2. Taylor argues that there are two types of respect - "genuine respect" and a facade of respect. Genuine respect involves recognizing the equal worth and value of other cultures without judgment based on one's own standards.
3. Certain groups like women, non-European cultures, and students in black schools have faced disrespect and harmful stereotypes imposed by Western colonizers, so they would benefit most from a shift to genuine respect that validates their cultures and identities.
An individual named Serge Brammertz allegedly attempted to murder someone and Jeremy Paxman because he feared losing $33 million if new media discovered that the International Criminal Court sells court verdicts and judicial appointments, as was witnessed by the document's author during ICC preparatory meetings in February 2001.
This document outlines a timeline of alleged events involving Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, Irwin Starr, and others conspiring to carry out murders. It claims that in the early 1970s, Trump asked Irwin Starr to contact people to assassinate Oleg Erovikin, a KGB general writing a dossier on Trump. It also alleges that Trump, Putin, and Starr had Gareth Williams murdered after he refused to help kill Erovikin. Finally, it asserts that Christopher Steele was paid by Trump for the double murder and later obtained Trump's dossier from Putin as insurance over Trump.
The document discusses war crimes that allegedly occurred in several towns in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Yugoslav wars in the 1990s. It provides brief descriptions of alleged massacres and killings of civilians in areas like Srebrenica, Zvornik, and Gorazde. Eyewitness testimony and indications of perpetrators are given for each reported incident. The nature of the alleged crimes include genocide, murder of civilians, and harassment of civilians. The purpose seems to be documenting war crimes against Serb civilians for historical or legal purposes.
Irrefutable Proof ICTY Is Corrupt Court/Irrefutable Proof the Hague Court Ca...Jill Starr
I represented the country of, The Republika of Srpska, and I was an, United States Citizen). No one ever did this before. There was no “observer status for NGOs.
These Secret Documentary Evidence Shows the ICC, can smuggle GOLD BARS, DRUGS AND ANYTHING ELSE THEY WANT TO WITHOUT DECLARING THEM, ORGANIZED CRIME WISH THEY HAD SUCH A DEAL, ALL THEY HAVE TO DO IS STATE, THEY ARE CARRYING THESE ITEMS AROUND THE WORLD ,”IN THE NAME OF THEIR ICC COURT.”
THEY HAD SUBSTANTIAL DISCUSSIONS ON TRADING CRIMINAL VERDICTS FOR CASH COUNTRY FUNDING FROM THE EU AND OTHER COUNTRIES STATING THE WILL PUT ANYONE IN JAIL IN THEIR HAGUE JAIL CELLS, FOR THE HIGHEST COUNTRY THAT GIVES IT THE MOST CASH AND DISCUSSED AUCTIONING OFF VERDICTS STARTING AT THE PRICE IN $30,000 SAID THE BRITISH AMBASSADOR. Another Ambassador said he thought it ,” was better to buy a criminal verdict from the ICC, for $40,000- and other Ambassadors spoke is if criminal life sentences were merely auction items for cash . And, they had the right to put anyone they wanted in jail by “PAYING OFF THE HAGUE AND IT’S PROSECUTOR, SERGE BRAMMERTZ..
What It’s Like to Chill Out With the World’s Most Ruthless Men: Ratko Mladic...Jill Starr
Retrospectively, it was all so simple, natural and matter of fact being on a boat restaurant in Belgrade, sitting with, laughing, drinking a two hundred bottle of wine and chatting about war and peace while Ratko Mladic held my hand. Mladic, a man considered the world’s most ruthless war criminal since Adolf Hitler, still at large and currently having a five million dollar bounty on his head for genocide by the international community. Yet there I was with my two best friends at the time, a former Serbian diplomat, his wife, and Ratko Mladic just chilling. There was no security, nothing you’d ordinarily expect in such circumstances. Referring to himself merely as, Sharko; this is the story of it all came abouT.
This document is a cover letter and resume submitted by Jill Louise Starr for a job opportunity. The cover letter indicates that Starr has a strong interest in working with the recipient's organization and advocates for her qualifications. The resume then provides details of Starr's educational and professional background, including experience working for the Bosnian Mission to the UN and representing Serbia in UN meetings. It highlights her extensive travel and conversations with war criminals Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic, demonstrating her knowledge of international politics and commitment to social justice.
No document was provided to summarize. A summary requires source text to extract the key points and essential information from. Without a document, it is not possible to generate an accurate 3 sentence summary.
Registered non-profits with 501(c)(3) status in the US can now get Google Apps Nonprofit Edition for free. To sign up, complete the online form and Google will verify nonprofit status. Google Apps Nonprofit Edition includes Gmail with 7GB storage, no ads, antivirus/antispam, and mobile access. While there is no cost from Google, implementation may require staff time and server costs. Security features include encryption, redundant storage, and user control over authentication. Sensitive data can be sent through a secure alternative instead of email. Google Sites allows for simple internal websites. Other free Google services for nonprofits include Google Analytics and Google Grants.
Miss Jill Louise Starr is writing to Dean Daniel McIntyre of New School University to demand accommodations and a monetary settlement for disability discrimination. She received an incomplete in a class and demands at least a one year extension to complete the class along with all recommended disability accommodations from her doctor. She also demands a monetary settlement of no less than $1 million due to ongoing discrimination and emotional abuse by the university that has impeded her progress for over a year. She reminds the Dean that human life has dignity and worth according to the UN Charter, which the university has not regarded for her.
This document profiles an individual who claims to be a war crimes investigator and international relations scholar. It provides numerous links to the person's professional websites and blog sites that contain information about their work investigating war crimes in Serbia and gifts received from individuals in Serbia and Montenegro. Their stated interests include movies, music, sports and travel.
The document discusses the United States' approach to foreign policy and diplomacy through history. It analyzes several conflicts where the US acted without UN authorization, including the 78-day NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999. This unilateral action undermined diplomatic ties with countries like China and Russia. It also increased instability in the Balkan region and raised legal questions about NATO's actions and use of depleted uranium weapons.
This document profiles an individual who claims to be a war crimes investigator and international relations scholar. It provides numerous links to the person's professional websites and blog sites that contain information about their work investigating war crimes in Serbia and gifts received from individuals in Serbia and Montenegro. Their stated interests include movies, music, sports and travel.
This document provides an outline for a paper that examines NATO's 78-day bombing campaign against Yugoslavia in 1999. The paper questions whether the bombing was a lawful humanitarian intervention or an international war crime. It includes sections that will analyze the history of ethnic tensions in Yugoslavia, evidence for a humanitarian crisis in Kosovo prior to the bombing, the roles of various actors like the Kosovo Liberation Army and OSCE, key events like the Racak massacre, the Rambouillet negotiations, damage caused by NATO bombing, and whether NATO's actions violated international law. The conclusion will examine NATO's occupation of Kosovo, environmental damage, targeting of civilian infrastructure, and attempted assassinations of Yugoslav political leaders.
This summary provides the essential information from the lengthy document in 3 sentences:
This document describes a woman's experience investigating war crimes in the former Yugoslavia and her interactions with some of the individuals accused of them, including Ratko Mladic. She details being dismissed from graduate school for her views on NATO's actions in Kosovo and staying in touch with Serbian contacts. She tells of attending a UN meeting on establishing an international criminal court as a representative of an NGO and taking notes for her friend Darko Trifunovic, the Bosnian ambassador.
Concentration Camps Prisons Camps and Sex Slavery in BosniaJill Starr
This document summarizes information about concentration camps, prisons, and brothels established during the conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the 1990s. It lists over 50 specific locations across Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Serbia where Serbs were imprisoned in concentration camps, including the estimated number of prisoners held at each location. It also lists over a dozen locations where Serb women were held as sex slaves in brothels established by Bosnian Muslim and Croatian forces. The document alleges widespread abuse, torture, and killing of Serb civilians in these camps and prisons throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Serbia during this time period.
Donald trump’s soviet russian mafia money laundering story as i eye witnessed...Jill Starr
Donald trump’s soviet russian mafia money laundering story as i eye witnessed it when my father was an anti soviet spy investigating trump for the cia back in 1969 1975
The document discusses the history and development of artificial intelligence over the past 70 years. It outlines some of the key milestones in AI research from the early work in the 1950s to modern advances in deep learning. While progress has been made, fully general artificial intelligence that can match or exceed human levels of intelligence is still an ongoing challenge that researchers are working to achieve.
1. The document discusses Charles Taylor's concept of "genuine respect" for different cultures and individuals.
2. Taylor argues that there are two types of respect - "genuine respect" and a facade of respect. Genuine respect involves recognizing the equal worth and value of other cultures without judgment based on one's own standards.
3. Certain groups like women, non-European cultures, and students in black schools have faced disrespect and harmful stereotypes imposed by Western colonizers, so they would benefit most from a shift to genuine respect that validates their cultures and identities.
An individual named Serge Brammertz allegedly attempted to murder someone and Jeremy Paxman because he feared losing $33 million if new media discovered that the International Criminal Court sells court verdicts and judicial appointments, as was witnessed by the document's author during ICC preparatory meetings in February 2001.
This document outlines a timeline of alleged events involving Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, Irwin Starr, and others conspiring to carry out murders. It claims that in the early 1970s, Trump asked Irwin Starr to contact people to assassinate Oleg Erovikin, a KGB general writing a dossier on Trump. It also alleges that Trump, Putin, and Starr had Gareth Williams murdered after he refused to help kill Erovikin. Finally, it asserts that Christopher Steele was paid by Trump for the double murder and later obtained Trump's dossier from Putin as insurance over Trump.
The document discusses war crimes that allegedly occurred in several towns in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Yugoslav wars in the 1990s. It provides brief descriptions of alleged massacres and killings of civilians in areas like Srebrenica, Zvornik, and Gorazde. Eyewitness testimony and indications of perpetrators are given for each reported incident. The nature of the alleged crimes include genocide, murder of civilians, and harassment of civilians. The purpose seems to be documenting war crimes against Serb civilians for historical or legal purposes.
Irrefutable Proof ICTY Is Corrupt Court/Irrefutable Proof the Hague Court Ca...Jill Starr
I represented the country of, The Republika of Srpska, and I was an, United States Citizen). No one ever did this before. There was no “observer status for NGOs.
These Secret Documentary Evidence Shows the ICC, can smuggle GOLD BARS, DRUGS AND ANYTHING ELSE THEY WANT TO WITHOUT DECLARING THEM, ORGANIZED CRIME WISH THEY HAD SUCH A DEAL, ALL THEY HAVE TO DO IS STATE, THEY ARE CARRYING THESE ITEMS AROUND THE WORLD ,”IN THE NAME OF THEIR ICC COURT.”
THEY HAD SUBSTANTIAL DISCUSSIONS ON TRADING CRIMINAL VERDICTS FOR CASH COUNTRY FUNDING FROM THE EU AND OTHER COUNTRIES STATING THE WILL PUT ANYONE IN JAIL IN THEIR HAGUE JAIL CELLS, FOR THE HIGHEST COUNTRY THAT GIVES IT THE MOST CASH AND DISCUSSED AUCTIONING OFF VERDICTS STARTING AT THE PRICE IN $30,000 SAID THE BRITISH AMBASSADOR. Another Ambassador said he thought it ,” was better to buy a criminal verdict from the ICC, for $40,000- and other Ambassadors spoke is if criminal life sentences were merely auction items for cash . And, they had the right to put anyone they wanted in jail by “PAYING OFF THE HAGUE AND IT’S PROSECUTOR, SERGE BRAMMERTZ..
What It’s Like to Chill Out With the World’s Most Ruthless Men: Ratko Mladic...Jill Starr
Retrospectively, it was all so simple, natural and matter of fact being on a boat restaurant in Belgrade, sitting with, laughing, drinking a two hundred bottle of wine and chatting about war and peace while Ratko Mladic held my hand. Mladic, a man considered the world’s most ruthless war criminal since Adolf Hitler, still at large and currently having a five million dollar bounty on his head for genocide by the international community. Yet there I was with my two best friends at the time, a former Serbian diplomat, his wife, and Ratko Mladic just chilling. There was no security, nothing you’d ordinarily expect in such circumstances. Referring to himself merely as, Sharko; this is the story of it all came abouT.
This document is a cover letter and resume submitted by Jill Louise Starr for a job opportunity. The cover letter indicates that Starr has a strong interest in working with the recipient's organization and advocates for her qualifications. The resume then provides details of Starr's educational and professional background, including experience working for the Bosnian Mission to the UN and representing Serbia in UN meetings. It highlights her extensive travel and conversations with war criminals Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic, demonstrating her knowledge of international politics and commitment to social justice.
No document was provided to summarize. A summary requires source text to extract the key points and essential information from. Without a document, it is not possible to generate an accurate 3 sentence summary.
Registered non-profits with 501(c)(3) status in the US can now get Google Apps Nonprofit Edition for free. To sign up, complete the online form and Google will verify nonprofit status. Google Apps Nonprofit Edition includes Gmail with 7GB storage, no ads, antivirus/antispam, and mobile access. While there is no cost from Google, implementation may require staff time and server costs. Security features include encryption, redundant storage, and user control over authentication. Sensitive data can be sent through a secure alternative instead of email. Google Sites allows for simple internal websites. Other free Google services for nonprofits include Google Analytics and Google Grants.
Miss Jill Louise Starr is writing to Dean Daniel McIntyre of New School University to demand accommodations and a monetary settlement for disability discrimination. She received an incomplete in a class and demands at least a one year extension to complete the class along with all recommended disability accommodations from her doctor. She also demands a monetary settlement of no less than $1 million due to ongoing discrimination and emotional abuse by the university that has impeded her progress for over a year. She reminds the Dean that human life has dignity and worth according to the UN Charter, which the university has not regarded for her.
This document profiles an individual who claims to be a war crimes investigator and international relations scholar. It provides numerous links to the person's professional websites and blog sites that contain information about their work investigating war crimes in Serbia and gifts received from individuals in Serbia and Montenegro. Their stated interests include movies, music, sports and travel.
The document discusses the United States' approach to foreign policy and diplomacy through history. It analyzes several conflicts where the US acted without UN authorization, including the 78-day NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999. This unilateral action undermined diplomatic ties with countries like China and Russia. It also increased instability in the Balkan region and raised legal questions about NATO's actions and use of depleted uranium weapons.
This document profiles an individual who claims to be a war crimes investigator and international relations scholar. It provides numerous links to the person's professional websites and blog sites that contain information about their work investigating war crimes in Serbia and gifts received from individuals in Serbia and Montenegro. Their stated interests include movies, music, sports and travel.
This document provides an outline for a paper that examines NATO's 78-day bombing campaign against Yugoslavia in 1999. The paper questions whether the bombing was a lawful humanitarian intervention or an international war crime. It includes sections that will analyze the history of ethnic tensions in Yugoslavia, evidence for a humanitarian crisis in Kosovo prior to the bombing, the roles of various actors like the Kosovo Liberation Army and OSCE, key events like the Racak massacre, the Rambouillet negotiations, damage caused by NATO bombing, and whether NATO's actions violated international law. The conclusion will examine NATO's occupation of Kosovo, environmental damage, targeting of civilian infrastructure, and attempted assassinations of Yugoslav political leaders.
This summary provides the essential information from the lengthy document in 3 sentences:
This document describes a woman's experience investigating war crimes in the former Yugoslavia and her interactions with some of the individuals accused of them, including Ratko Mladic. She details being dismissed from graduate school for her views on NATO's actions in Kosovo and staying in touch with Serbian contacts. She tells of attending a UN meeting on establishing an international criminal court as a representative of an NGO and taking notes for her friend Darko Trifunovic, the Bosnian ambassador.