Citat:
Om det då går så fruktansvärt dåligt för oss (ingenting som märks av i nuläget direkt...?), hur kommer det sig att alla nyttiga idioter fortsätter försvara och ursäkta Putin, som faktiskt bär ansvaret för denna "försämring" av den svenska situationen och levernet? Det är inte Ryssland det går dåligt för. Det är oss det går sämst för. Nu skall man försöka lura oss att sluta flyga och köra bil, igen.
https://www.theguardian.com/environm...-income-report
När kommer folk att få upp ögonen för att stormakterna attackerar Europa som helhet med detta krig?
https://www.theguardian.com/environm...-income-report
När kommer folk att få upp ögonen för att stormakterna attackerar Europa som helhet med detta krig?

Tja, inte dött så mycket svenskar än iaf.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/06/w...asualties.html
Citat:
More Russians Consider Costs of War in Ukraine as Casualties Mount
It was only with his brother’s death, Mr. Kononov, 32, said in a phone interview, that he started paying attention to the war raging just over 50 miles from his home. And he realized, he said, that his brother had died in a war that “no one needs.”
“If everyone learns everything, there will be protests,” Mr. Kononov, who works in a freight business, said, referring to the awareness of the Russian public at large. “And I think that would be for the best. Because this war has to stop. There ought to be no wars at all.”
Six weeks after President Vladimir V. Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, many Russians remain in the dark about the depth of their country’s losses — and about the carnage and brutal atrocities that their military is inflicting as it retreats in the North. But increasingly, the reality of war is intruding in the lives of regular families when death notices and black body bags arrive, causing some, like Mr. Kononov, to question the war.
It was only with his brother’s death, Mr. Kononov, 32, said in a phone interview, that he started paying attention to the war raging just over 50 miles from his home. And he realized, he said, that his brother had died in a war that “no one needs.”
“If everyone learns everything, there will be protests,” Mr. Kononov, who works in a freight business, said, referring to the awareness of the Russian public at large. “And I think that would be for the best. Because this war has to stop. There ought to be no wars at all.”
Six weeks after President Vladimir V. Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, many Russians remain in the dark about the depth of their country’s losses — and about the carnage and brutal atrocities that their military is inflicting as it retreats in the North. But increasingly, the reality of war is intruding in the lives of regular families when death notices and black body bags arrive, causing some, like Mr. Kononov, to question the war.
Undrar när föräldrar till dem som beordrades gräva skyttegravar i Tjernobyl kommer få begrava sina söner? Blykista kan inte vara billigt...
