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The amount this guy doesn't know about the Russian federation, if turned into drops of water, would fill Lake Baikal. Let's for example compare one of the people that Russians 'brutally' conquered, the Sakha or Yakut...with say, the Navaho. The Sakha have their own republic, their language is thriving and is co-official with Russian, they have their own film industry, they have high wages due to mining of silver and diamonds and other things. It would be as if Arizona was co-extensive with the Navaho reservation, Navaho was co-official with English as the state language, there were several Navaho language short and full length films coming out every year.
As a side a Sakha/Yakut soldier recently went viral because he was in a brutal hand-to-hand combat with a Ukrainian soldier which ended sadly but also with a bit of Russian language camaraderie. The Sakha, or Yakut, soldier served his contract and is now safely back home. The Ukrainian is in Valhalla. Anyone really interested in these things can follow Maria from Yakutia or Kiun B right here. Anyone more interested in the ethnic Russians in Siberia as a whole (the vast majority of the Siberian population), can take a look at Matt and Julia, a channel again right here on YT. I don't expect anyone to, though.
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Okay Finns. Karelian has been government by Russia for over three centuries, much longer than where I am writing has been governed by my country (the US of A), slightly over one and a half centuries. Moreover, the Karelians are overwhelmingly Orthodox Christians in tradition, whereas the Finns are overwhelmingly Lutheran or post-Protestant. That makes a difference, just like it does for South Slav Catholics (Croatians) and Orthodox (Serbians). Language isn't the only thing that matters in creating an ethnicity, and the Russian Federation has actually worked quite hard to keep its small Finno-Urgic languages alive.
The current population of Karelia is over 80% Russian, and even back in the 1920s, close to one of the few times a Finnish state ruled Karelia, Russians were a majority of over 55% in the region. There might have been a few towns and villages were Karellians were a majority, but Russians were the overall majority.
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Many of the so-called 'civilian targets' are nothing of the sort. For example, last August the Ukrainians reported that the Russians had hit a 'Pizza Restaurant' and 'shopping center'. Well, a few days later video started emerging of a bunch of young, fit, English speaking guys (with various accents) emerged trying to get comrades out of the rubble. An American soldier of fortune was killed. Turns out the Russians hit exactly what they said, a barrack for foreign fighters in Ukraine. There were some collateral civilian casualites, but even those were 'interesting'. One was a Columbian ex-politician turned lobbiest for the Ukraine in South America (he was wounded). Another was a very prominent Ukrainian journalist/propagandist who regularly appeared on the UK's Telegraph podcast about the Ukraine. Clearly what the Russians hit in this strike was not only the barracks but the equivalent of 'the Green zone' in Iraq...there's always an area where the journos, contractors, political operators, three letter agency guys, top military and civilan planners etc congregate in war.
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@GloriaHoulihan Russia expanded its thermo-electric plant in Kaliningrad in 2020, and built an LNG terminal there in the same year. It has in fact been preparing for being separated from the Russia power grid for five years (the Baltics, despite their rhetoric, took their sweet time). Meanwhile, Euronews reports that in Estonia "From €126 per MWh last week, the new average electricity price will be €191 per MWh, a high for 2025 so far." David O'Sullivan "Electricity Prices rise in Estonia after cut from Russian power grid". 12-02-2025 (euro style date format). Georgian Dream is firmly entrenched, they rode out the NGO-inspired riots, and the country is more Russia inclined than anytime since 2008. Transnistria could indeed be a problem, but I think Azerbaijan will get over the airplane incident. Chechens are active, for the Federation, in the Kursk sector.
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Well, some sort of fact checking or at least amending.
1. Russia's Economy is smaller than Canadas
According to our own CIA, Russia is the sixth largest economy in the world by Purchasing Power Parity(PPP) . It is about 10% smaller than Germany's. It is more than two times the size of Canada's as measured by PPP.
2. Independent media in Russia is shut down.
Not if you mean all independent media. For example, there is 'Redaktsiya' right here on Youtube. Not so subtly anti-Putin. And they have been labeled as a 'foreign agent'. But Alexei Pivovar and his team are operating in Russia. They must have good lawyers.
3.Tucker Carlson has said he is 'on Russia's side'.
Well, if anyone can find a link, I might believe it. But I have watched a good bit of Tucker and have never seen him say that. Being neutral, or noticing that Putin has done pretty much nothing to harm your average America, is not being 'on his side'.
4. There was nothing new.
Well, I think the revelation about Boris Johnson interfering to stop a possible peace deal is news to a lot of people, if not those who have been following the war. Ditto with the revelation of French and German involvement in getting Putin to withdraw his troops from the outskirts of Kiev (the Ukrainians did a great defense but at that point were not conduciting any sort of counteroffensive so the idea that the Russians were going to be 'surrounded' or 'cut off' is complete malarky). Some of the details about Putin's feelers about NATO and a possible common missile defense were new, even if the general outline of the story is known. I personally didn't know about Polish collaboration with Nazi Germany...in fact I thought Putin was crazy there. But no, Wiki tells me about the Polish-German non-aggression pact of 1934 and also the tandem German, Polish military pressure on Czechoslovakia in the run up to the Munich conference.
5. Nobody is going to care.
Maybe, but the interview now has tens if not hundreds of millions of views across various platforms.
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@pjandryanadventuresruntime7692 I am perfectly willing to believe this guy is more on the Russian side. He's Russian. He worked for RT. But even if you go to the New York Times video about Ukrainian refugees in Russia, and read between the lines, you'll realize that what he is saying is largely true. And this is far less propagandistic than most Western media.
The NY Times put up a propaganda piece with ominous music, dark shots (one of a shaking Chihuahua, as if those the Russkies were scaring the dog). And yet, if you paid attention, you'd learn that the Ukrainians were fed and housed and, if they so chose, were able to travel across Russia on Ukrainian passports -- we know because one young lady specifically said she refused a Russian passport. Ironically two of the people interviewed in Europe were military aged men, who wouldn't have been able to leave Ukraine through a Ukrainian border post.
Heck, Russia has even released known hardcore Azov militants.
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Brendan Eich is the guy who invented Javascript and then went on to found the Mozilla project (Firefox browser, etc). In 2008 he donated, completely legally, to a campaign in California to keep 'marriage' limited to one man and one woman. (Same sex civil unions were specifically allowed under the proposition, Proposition 8). That proposition won...you know, democracy! Well, homosexual activists burrowed into the public contribution records and found Eich donated. They conducted a campaign against him and he was eventually forced out of the very organization he founded. Of course he wasn't the only one, regular working class people were targeted for 'consequences' too.
Granted, he didn't go to prison, just had the work of much of his life taking away from him. For exercising free speech (very quitely).
Oh, and a seven person court overturned the vote of millions of Californians. So much for 'democracy'.
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Everything you hear on this channel is, to put it mildly, exaggerated for propaganda purposes, and clicks. Eighty percent of the Russian Federation Population identify as ethnic Russian (Russki -- Русски). That's 116 million people. The next biggest group, the Tatars, are only 6.5 million. And despite the US trying to stir up trouble (RFE has or had a Tatar language media service, for example) there is just no indication that there is widespread dissatisfaction with Russia or non-identification with the state. In fact one of the most popular 'Russian' vloggers -- Eli from Russia -- is of Tatar and Bashkir descent. Likewise there just is no real desire for independence in the huge (geographically) Sakha republic and there are great vloggers from there (Maria from Yakutia, KiunB) .The only serious potential problem for the RF is Chechnya, but that seems to be sorted for now. The other Caucasian peoples...Dagestanis, Ossetians, etc ... actually look to Russia to protect and maintain peace in the Region and have for centuries.
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Languages, especially written modern languages, aren't just existing in nature, they are created. And as such they are subject to political manipulation. In the mid 19th century south slav linguists consciously created a language based on a dialect that Muslim, Catholic, and Orthodox south slavs shared. And that became standard Servant and Croatian, designed to unify across religion. When Croatian nationalism developed in the mid 20th century their linguists sought to make Croatian more different from Serbian, adopting words other Croatian dialects, coining new 'pure' Croatian words, etc. I suspect that Ukrainian nationalists have tried to make as much difference between standard Ukrainian and Russian as possible and also that most of the so called Surzhik isn't a mix or creole, but just natural gradiation in dialects. It is kinda funny that in the last video there was an image that literally said 'Stop Surzhik' written in Cyrillic. I guess its okay to adopt English words wholesale, but not ones from the closely related Russian. It's also funny that both Ukrainians, Sergei Sputnikov and Serhii Ploxiy, have goatees...
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I have an opinion on the war in Syria. It was caused by Western and Turkish, but mostly Western, intervention no doubt at the behinds the scenes urging of Israel and its lobbies in the West. And certainly Israel's constant attacks against Syria...a country that is around 10%-20% Christian and whose Muslims are often easy going Alawites... don't help.
As for the Arabs being 'immigrants', I wish I had it at my fingertips (I don't) but I have read an article on the cyclical (both yearly and life cycle) movement of Arabs from one region in the Ottoman Empire, say Baghdad, to another, say Haifa. A quick search on Ottoman Haifa turns up the Jerzreel Valley railway, a project began under the Ottomans that certainly would have employed Arab labor from throughout the Arab world. So no, Arab movement to what is now Israel didn't start with the British, though perhaps it increased under the mandate.
Finally, everything I've seen says 700,000 Palestinian (or if you prefer Arab) refugees.
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@dianamunoz4296 One trespasser was executed by a Capitol cop, yes. Then again people died in Seatle's CHAZ/CHOP , in the multiple BLM/Floyd riots, etc.
We had six months of political violence in 2020, with the White House attacked, city blocks being destroyed, two police precincts being abandoned (one razed to the ground, one occupied), a small secession in a major US city, multiple symbols of our nation's history being destroyed (not just Confederate monuments), and a federal courthouse under siege nightly with multiple federal officers wounded.
The events of January 6 can only be understood in that context.
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@viktorm3840 The reason the standardizers of Serbo-Croatian or (as it was called in Tito's Croatia Hrvato-Serbian) chose Shtokavski (from the word for 'what) as the 'dialect' to standardize was specifically that this dialect was shared by Orthodox, Muslims, and Catholics. The other two 'dialects' were and are found only in Catholic (i.e. Croatian) areas; Chakavski on the Dalmatian Islands and Kajkavski in the Zagorje, the mountains of Northern Croatia. The reason it is close to Sarajevo speech is that Vuk Karadzic, arguably the primary standardizer, was from Western Serbia right on the border of what is now Bosnia-Hercegovina and that area spoke the Jekavski or Western 'variant' of Shtokavski as do most Bosnia and Croatian speakers.
During WWII and the fascist 'Independent State of Croatia' there was quite a lot of effort into separating official Croatian from Serbian, plus an emphasis on linguistic purism (thus things like Brzoglas for Telephone). There was also some effort at separating the two languages among Croatian nationalists during SFRY times which was of course 'discouraged'. Since independence though there really hasn't been much effort, despite officially calling the language Croatian, into creating difference. There certainly hasn't been any move to an official role for Kajkavski. Their linguistic organization (Matica Hrvatska), however, has adopted a concept of the language as a system based on the three dialects, rather than having one central dialect.
The lesson here is probably one that most watching this video already knows....languages aren't something that are just found in nature. They can be and are shaped by political ideologies.
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@wgowshipping Same article: 'Russia's exports of potassium-based fertiliser muriate of potash (MOP) however, fell 37% in 2022, according to Argus, and it has not exported any ammonia since the war began because its pipeline, which runs to Ukraine's Black Sea port of Pivdennyi (Yuzhny), remains shut.'
So no, from the Russian point of few the deal was not fulfilled. Limited access to SWIFT did not happen, 'oligarchs' (Russian for businessmen) in the grain and fertilizer business remain under sanction, which means those dealing with them can face prison, and the ammonia pipeline wasn't opened. Russia extended the deal for six months, still no action.
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A lot problematic here.
1. The decline in infant mortality is due far more to improved sanitation than to medical interventions.
2. Medical interventions themselves are often not the product of 'science', but of practice. Sure there might be some scientific studies after the fact of a procedure or process being developed, but praxis comes first.
3. Presentation ignores the whole problem of paradigm confirmation bias. Get a result that fails to confirm the dominant paradigm? It gets circular filed, or variables are added, or data is 'cleaned'. Gotta keep those research grants coming and contradicting the dominant paradigm doesn't do that.
4. You need to read Thomas Kuhn's Structure of Scientific Revolutions.
5. Risk-rewards always have to be considered. Cost-benefits too. Given what we know about Covid, a healthy person in their 20s doesn't need a Covid vaccination. That's not anti-vaccination...that's following the data.
The problem with people who claim to be 'for' science is that they aren't for it when they disagree with its conclusions. They think, for example, that IQ tests are 'flawed' when study after study shows they measure something real and that higher IQ people have, on average, better outcomes on a whole range of things from earnings to likelihood of dying due to an accident, than lower IQ people. Likewise study after study shows that IQ is strongly, though not totally, inherited. Usually people who 'believe the science' and make a big deal about 'believing the science' -- the sorts with those platitude filled signs in their yards -- will reject the science here.
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Why weren't sanctions imposed against the US when we invaded, oh, take your pick...Panama, Haiti, Vietnam, the Dominican Republic...okay, just in the last 30 years, Serbia, Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia... ? I mean, as an American it's great that we don't get sanctioned...maybe a few works of anger from Euro-folks, but nothing too serious.
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But Tucker was comparing our biggest city...New York, to Russia's biggest city...Moscow. It's a fair comparison. It is true that our county has done well, I think mostly by luck or natural processes, in having different industries and businesses develop in different areas. Maybe compare Russia, in terms of centralization, with other European countries. London, at 7.5 million, is about 7.6x more populous than the UK's second largest city, Birmingham at .984 million. Paris is 2.69x the size of Marseille (2.14M to .795). Moscow is only 2.15x bigger than St. Petersburg Russia (10.3M, 5.0M). Also, Russia has been cut off from what historically was its third biggest city, a city which industrialized and modernized while under Russian rule or in a political union with Russia from 1793 to 1991. That is of course Kiev. It's no accident that the Kievskaya station was a show piece (notice in Tucker's vid the mosaic with the tractor driver in the trad Ukrainian vyshyvanka). The population figures from the site worldpopulationreview.com -- they seem low; figures on city populations can vary depending on how the city is defined.
Anyways there's tons of vids of Russian cities right here on YT. The Russian Plus guy, no Putin symp, did a video overviewing the 30 largest ones. The stuff about the 'no running water' is pretty manipulative. There's a great video here from Maria from Yakutia showing how they get their water from lake ice in the winter. Their house isn't some abandoned hovel...its just hard to put water pipes in an area that gets to -70 degrees celsius (the city of Yakutsk itself has gas/water etc/ in above ground, heavily insulated pipes). Strangely, in my own California county, the northern half has quite a few properties without city water or sewer lines, they use wells and septic tanks.
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@unbindingfloyd Well, that presumes that modern standard Ukrainian was ever spoken in Krivoy Rog. There was no standard Ukrainian language when the area became part of the Russian Empire -- said Empire assuming control of the area after the Russo-Turkish war in 1774 (before the US became a country btw). There is also no evidence that the people of the area at that time identified themselves as Ukrainian. Ukrainian national identity and Ukrainian nationalism only emerges in the mid 19th century and was concentrated in was its known as Right Bank Ukraine.
Nor is there a lot of evidence that Russia forced people from the Ukraine to speak Russian. In fact this channel's owner family shows what likely happened in the case of the vast majority of people in Ukraine. They came from villages, their village language version of Ukrainian wasn't standard and at any rate they sought to speak the language of upward mobility. So they switched to the closely related, standardized Russian. And they chose to have their child educated in that language. No compulsion involved, other than the compulsion toward get a better life experienced all over the world by people moving to cities. After all, you won't hear much Bavarian on the streets of Munich...even though it very distinct from German and has been developed into a written form. You don't hear much Alsatian German on the streets of Strasbourg, even though just two generations ago all the villages surrounding the city would have many Alsatian speakers. Even in Barcelona, at least the last time I was there about a decade ago, Castillian Spanish is still more spoken on the street than Catalan, despite huge efforts by the 'Generalitat'. It's the language of wider communication.
So no, its not a 'grey area' created by gaslighting. It's an actual grey area. And the only revisionism being done is by the Ukrainian governments' 'Ukrainization'. Of course in that they follow the footsteps of the Soviets.
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First, yes, I think that Russia should not have lied to some (not nearly all) of their troops as to the mission. Just plain stupid. And that was, in terms of this war, long ago.
Second, while the 'Nazi' thing is overdone, the fact is that right wing paramilitaries were active in Ukraine, with the blessing of the Kyiv regime, for the last eight years if not more (actually certainly more). Kraken, Pravy Sektor, Azov...all of these terrorized pro-Russian and ethnically Russian citizens of Borderland.
Third, sure, some 'young people' have left Russia. Youtubers. Not nearly a representative sample. Here we see plenty of 'young people' supporting their homeland.
Finally, as far as war crimes...I'm sure some have been committed. But most of the western media is just insanely biased. For example, the missile strike on Vinnyistia was on a 'House of Officers', a place for Rest and Recreation, but also for hosting meetings, for military administration and the like. And it appears, from the death of three Ukrainian Air Force colonels, at least one specialized in logistics, that the Russian MOD claim of a meeting with foreign arms supplies is quite possible even probably. The 'collateral damage' was horrible, but if this was a US drone strike we wouldn't even be discussing it.
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And 56 years ago we opened the door to massive immigration, esp. from the 'Developing World'. Pretty much exactly 50 years ago, 1972, our foreign born population reached a low as a percentage of the total. Now it is at a high. This is a big reason we haven't seen workers benefit from huge gains in productivity. Immigrants are willing to work more, in more dangerous conditions, for less money. They drag wages down. Plus they compete in the housing market (purchase or rental), their kids compete for scare educational resources, etc. If we even halved the number of immigrants...legal or illegal, regular or irregular...coming in we would see real wages rise, housing prices start to stabilize, etc.
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Yes, either entering the US without going thru inspection or lying to customs and border authorities is a federal crime. First time is a misdemeanor but still a crime, second is a felony. Here is the relevant law from 8 U.S.C 1325 (courtesy of Cornell Law)
(a)Improper time or place; avoidance of examination or inspection; misrepresentation and concealment of facts
Any alien who (1) enters or attempts to enter the United States at any time or place other than as designated by immigration officers, or (2) eludes examination or inspection by immigration officers, or (3) attempts to enter or obtains entry to the United States by a willfully false or misleading representation or the willful concealment of a material fact, shall, for the first commission of any such offense, be fined under title 18 or imprisoned not more than 6 months, or both, and, for a subsequent commission of any such offense, be fined under title 18, or imprisoned not more than 2 years, or both.
(b)Improper time or place; civil penalties
Any alien who is apprehended while entering (or attempting to enter) the United States at a time or place other than as designated by immigration officers shall be subject to a civil penalty of—
(1)at least $50 and not more than $250 for each such entry (or attempted entry); or
(2)twice the amount specified in paragraph (1) in the case of an alien who has been previously subject to a civil penalty under this subsection.
Civil penalties under this subsection are in addition to, and not in lieu of, any criminal or other civil penalties that may be imposed.
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So isn't Obatzda basically the same idea as beer cheese?
This is what I don't get about a lot of Europeans. and even Asians. We have things in the US that are clearly derived from something European or Asian. For example, lasagna. Well, of course a typical American lasagna isn't the same as one from Napoli or Calabria. But it is clearly the same idea. Flat noodles, tomato sauce, cheeses, maybe meat. In layers. It's not like it's something unrecognizable. And yet Italains will be 'oh, that's not real lasagna'.
Well, same with beer cheese. I don't know if beer cheese originated among German immigrants (Kentucky borders the German-heavy Ohio) or 'we' came up with it independently. But Germans, specifically Muncheners, do have a cheese spread that includes beer to make the cheese spreadable, and it's called Obatzda (which I think is Bavarian for 'mixed up' but I could be wrong). So it's not like the whole concept of cheese mixed with a bit of beer and other stuff to make a spread is totally foreign to Bavarians. Granted it's usually a dip for radishes rather than pretzels or bread sticks, but still...
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I enjoy this channel but I have some quibbles today.
Rybar, has reported that three Su-34s were shot down by Patriot missiles. Rybarl is one of the most reliable and Mr Svinchuk*, its principal, appears almost daily on Solovyov's show. The shootdown occured Dec 22 and at least one pilot survived. Theforth and fifth shootdowns claimed a few days later are highly suspicious and AFAIK haven't been confirmed. BTW Rybar is the source for a good proportion of the Intel Slava Z reporting, literally just translated into English using autotranslate.
Also the latest missile strike was in Theodosia not Sebastopol. It is a second ship of the Ropucha class to be damaged severly...the first was indeed at a dry dock but this one was tied up at a wharf. Ukrainians sources claim it was carrying Shahed drones and there were secondary explosions. But it seems strange that the Shaheds were proloaded with their weapons...unless that's just they they work. Usually ordinance is loaded or attached to a platform at the last moment before a sorty. The secondary explosions might have been just fuel, or shells.
As for analysis, yes, the two or three Ropuchas lost were all Soviet era, 1970s ships. And they probably are not important for their primary purpose of amphibious warfare. But they are still large (literally in the name Bolshoi Desantni Korabl'--BDK) ships which can transport ammunition or troops. While not gamechanging, each lost has some significiance. I myself poo-pooed the lost of the Moskva as I knew this would be a land war, but it turns out that having her radar, electronic warfare and strike capabilities probably would have helped Russia have a more complete dominance in the Black Sea. And while I am sure this particular missile strike was timed as a distraction, it also did some real damage. It has also shown that Russia hasn't solved the Stormshadow/Scalp problem which I hoped they had when it was so long between successive strikes of this type weapon.
Best not to look too rosily at events.
* I forget his given name...ironically the family name is very Ukrainian.
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@davidfulton179 No, the Kiev government is fighting for rabid anti-Russian nationalism based on ridiculously twisted history. For more than a decade as Russia recovered from the 90s the Ukraine recovered with it. In fact, the Russian Federation supported the Ukrainian government with cheap gas, fees for transport for gas to Europe, easy entry into the RF for Ukrainian workers, contracts for heavy industries in the Ukraine, and financial support. And the Ukrainians still stole gas and didn't what they owed to Russia. Nevertheless as the RF recovered so did the Ukraine. However, a certain faction of Ukrainian ultranationalists, supported by the west, couldn't stand the ties with Russia, couldn't stand respecting the rights of Russian speakers and those who identify as ethnic Russians (45% and 17% of the population respectively) and started destroying just Russian/Ukrainian heritage even before 2014. They then fomented, with US and EU support, the Majdan coup.
And contrary to popular believe, entry into the EU isn't a key to prosperity. Some Eastern Europe countries like Estonia have been relatively successful, countries like Latvia and Lithuania have lost population...including some of their 'best and brightest' to emigration to western europe, while others like Romania and Bulgaria remain the basketcases they have been for nearly two centuries. Russia could have helped with that.
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First, it would be really useful for Georgians, Turkmens, etc to known Russian, as huge numbers of these folks work in the Federation. There were, for example, an estimated 500,000 Georgians in the Russian Federation as of 2020.
Second, nearly all the ex colonial empires do the same. France promotes le Francophonia. Spain, who you'd think would be satisfied with its 17 or so countries that have Espanyol as official, promotes Spanish even in places like Morocco and Equitorial Guinea and the Philippines. Even Germany has its Goethe institutes around the world but especially in Central Europe.
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@VHS_NEON There were death threats against Trump. The Secret Service were so worried they moved Trump and family to a bunker. Dozens of Secret Service, park rangers and other federal LEO were injured. A church was burned within a few yards of the White House fence. A perimeter of barricades outside that fence was breached and rioters were shaking the wrought iron fence around the WH, and those can give way with enough weight and motion.
The attack was far more serious and dangerous than the riot at capitol hill. It was an attack on both the symbol of the US government, the head of state and government, while our government was functioning. And yet there has been no web page set up to identify the White House attackers, no national man hunt. No show trial of a congressional 'investigation' to discover what lead to the attacks, who encouraged them, etc.
OTOH at Capitol here was virtually no damage, no fire, no deaths to anyone but protestors (who were fired on by cops with pepper balls etc, even those just on Capitol grounds outside). Officer Sicknik died due to a stroke...not injuries sustained during the riot. (a lie spread by NYT and others). It's possible the stress set off the stroke...but street cops experience, you know, stress, daily.
And of course that's just in Washington DC. In Portland there was a month long siege of a Federal Courthouse, yet even when identified and charged most of the perps had their charges dismissed. The walls of 'Vets' and 'Moms' who protected the more violent attackers (a classic Antifa technique btw, put 'innocent non-violent' protestors between the militant and violent Black Block types) haven't been charged at all. All the while, city and state officials in Oregon actively interfered in Federal LEOs attempts to control the situation around the courthouse.
We can go up the I-5 to Seattle and talk about an actual secession from the US in a small part of a major US city, complete with armed left wing militants at barricades and, ultimately 3-4 deaths including one murder committed by said guards, but this is too long already. Just to bad an alleged 'right wing' person believes the regime media.
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