STEELE CITY, NE - Placing a Russian Ushanka fur hat on his balding head, 51-year old former Keystone XL Pipeline worker Allen Brokeson excitedly danced a little Russian jig he had been practicing. He was preparing for a weeks-long voyage via shipping container to the Baltic Sea, rail car to Moscow, then yak-drawn wagon to the employment office of the company overseeing construction of the Nord Stream 2 Pipeline from Russia to Germany. "I need a job, and President Biden has paved an obstacle-free path for me to find work doing something I love: connecting pipes for untouchable oligarchs."

CNN praised Biden's move to lift Russian sanctions and allow pipeline construction to continue, as '2D Chess,' citing the growing need for American jobs, and emphasizing the economically disastrous decisi

See Full Page