Comments by "Thetequilashooter1" (@Thetequilashooter1) on "Daily Mail World"
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@УтроНАморе Not jealous at all. The US has provided less than 2.5% of its military budget, and Russia's military power has significantly decreased. It's so bad that Russia has to pull equipment built over 70 years ago. The average American doesn't even keep track of the war, and it has had no influence on their living. You can't say the same about Russians where it's a third world shithole outside of Moscow and Saint Petersburg.
And don't brag too much, Russia lost over half of the territory it once held; the world is mocking the Russian military for its incompetence, poor leadership, poor training, and being poorly equiped. And most of the territory that Russia currently holds was already under Russian separatists control prior to this new phase of the war. What has Russia gotten in return? It's got totally destroyed and barren land, hundreds of thousands of dead Russian soldiers, around a million injured, an economy that is struggling, and it's lost access to much needed western parts. Russia has become the world's laughing stock! Congrats!!!
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If there are any countries that could take claims to Ukraine they would be Poland and Lithuania. Read below:
Kiev, were conquered by Poland and Lithuania in the early 14th century. For roughly four hundred years, these territories, encompassing most of present-day Ukraine, were formally ruled by Poland-Lithuania, which left a deep cultural imprint on them. During these four centuries, the Orthodox East Slavic population of these lands gradually developed an identity distinct from that of the East Slavs remaining in the territories under Mongol and later Muscovite rule. A distinct Ukrainian language had already begun to emerge in the dying days of the Kievan Rus’ (notwithstanding Vladimir Putin’s factually incorrect claim that “the first linguistic differences [between Ukrainians and Russians] appeared only around the 16th century”). Following the incorporation of present-day Ukraine into Poland-Lithuania, the Ukrainian language evolved in relative isolation from the Russian language. At the same time, religious divisions developed within Eastern Orthodoxy. From the mid-15th to the late 17th centuries, the Orthodox Churches in Moscow and in Kiev developed as separate entities, initiating a division that eventually resurfaced in later schisms.
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@ahmedalsharman That’s not true. Aside from its cultural proximity, Ukraine’s sentimental and spiritual appeal to many Russians derives from the fact that the Kievan Rus’ – a medieval state that came into existence in the 9th century and was centred around present-day Kiev – is regarded as a joint ancestral homeland that laid the foundations for both modern Russia and Ukraine. But from the time of its foundation to its conquest by the Mongols in the 13th century, the Rus’ was an increasingly fragmented federation of principalities. Its south-western territories, including Kiev, were conquered by Poland and Lithuania in the early 14th century. For roughly four hundred years, these territories, encompassing most of present-day Ukraine, were formally ruled by Poland-Lithuania, which left a deep cultural imprint on them.* During these four centuries, the Orthodox East Slavic population of these lands gradually developed an identity distinct from that of the East Slavs remaining in the territories under Mongol and later Muscovite rule. A distinct Ukrainian language had already begun to emerge in the dying days of the Kievan Rus’ (notwithstanding Vladimir Putin’s factually incorrect claim that “the first linguistic differences [between Ukrainians and Russians] appeared only around the 16th century”). Following the incorporation of present-day Ukraine into Poland-Lithuania, the Ukrainian language evolved in relative isolation from the Russian language. At the same time, religious divisions developed within Eastern Orthodoxy. From the mid-15th to the late 17th centuries, the Orthodox Churches in Moscow and in Kiev developed as separate entities, initiating a division that eventually resurfaced in later schisms.
Russia lies all the time. It’s trying to justify its invasion, which has been based entirely on Russian misinformation and lies.
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