Excellent find Johnny, worth the 22 minute listen.JohnnyYou » Today, 8:16 am » wrote: ↑ Well @Cannonpointer ? It looks to me like Putin is Quacking Up in lame duck oldism...
Caolan Robertson is a fine young man..Even @roadkill showed one of his videos once.... and dissappeared shortly afterward.
Ukraine is innovative.. Neccessity is the Mother of Invention. Give 'em back Crimea.. or Crimea River..
https://youtu.be/tYjbzo5QSTY?si=QoY9MOnnG5NXgEbB
This week feels like the beginning of something genuinely different. Just days after Russia’s deeply embarrassing Victory Day parade, where almost no major military hardware was shown, Moscow has now come under one of the biggest long-range attacks since the full-scale invasion began. One of Russia’s most protected oil refineries was hit at a time when the Kremlin is struggling more and more to convince its own people that this war is still a success. That doesn’t mean the war is ending anytime soon. But it does mean something important: Russia suddenly looks weak, both inside and outside the country. I just got back from Venice a few days ago, where Russians seemed desperate to project strength to the world through culture, influence, and propaganda. But after spending time around it all, what struck me most was that the messaging no longer feels aimed at the West. It feels aimed inward. The propaganda now seems focused on reassuring Russians themselves that everything is still under control. This week, I spoke to Bill Browder about what he believes is happening inside Russia right now, why the Kremlin is becoming increasingly obsessed with controlling perception, and what that tells us about the state of Russian society today. I hope you enjoy the report. If you do, please consider subscribingMost of my reporting focuses on the front lines in Ukraine and Russia’s wider propaganda war across Europe. I’ll also be publishing a major documentary this week filmed in Nikopol, right beside Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, looking at how Russia has weaponized the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant during the war. Thank you so much for watching. My links are here 🫡
https://linktr.ee/CaolanRobertson
First thing Fruity CP will say is its propaganda. Pooty will be gone soon.Fuelman » 23 minutes ago » wrote: ↑ Excellent find Johnny, worth the 22 minute listen.
When CP gets done with his cry fest over countries using proxies against Russia, he will address your post. We may have to put him on suicide watch.![]()
BTY, welcome to the Government Teat! It's not much but you can actually live on Ramen.
Bill BrowderJohnnyYou » Today, 8:16 am » wrote: ↑ Well @Cannonpointer ? It looks to me like Putin is Quacking Up in lame duck oldism...
Caolan Robertson is a fine young man..Even @roadkill showed one of his videos once.... and dissappeared shortly afterward.
Ukraine is innovative.. Neccessity is the Mother of Invention. Give 'em back Crimea.. or Crimea River..
https://youtu.be/tYjbzo5QSTY?si=QoY9MOnnG5NXgEbB
This week feels like the beginning of something genuinely different. Just days after Russia’s deeply embarrassing Victory Day parade, where almost no major military hardware was shown, Moscow has now come under one of the biggest long-range attacks since the full-scale invasion began. One of Russia’s most protected oil refineries was hit at a time when the Kremlin is struggling more and more to convince its own people that this war is still a success. That doesn’t mean the war is ending anytime soon. But it does mean something important: Russia suddenly looks weak, both inside and outside the country. I just got back from Venice a few days ago, where Russians seemed desperate to project strength to the world through culture, influence, and propaganda. But after spending time around it all, what struck me most was that the messaging no longer feels aimed at the West. It feels aimed inward. The propaganda now seems focused on reassuring Russians themselves that everything is still under control. This week, I spoke to Bill Browder about what he believes is happening inside Russia right now, why the Kremlin is becoming increasingly obsessed with controlling perception, and what that tells us about the state of Russian society today. I hope you enjoy the report. If you do, please consider subscribing 🙏Most of my reporting focuses on the front lines in Ukraine and Russia’s wider propaganda war across Europe. I’ll also be publishing a major documentary this week filmed in Nikopol, right beside Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, looking at how Russia has weaponized the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant during the war. Thank you so much for watching. My links are here 🫡❤️🇺🇦 https://linktr.ee/CaolanRobertson
GoBlackvegetable » 28 minutes ago » wrote: ↑ Bill Browder
His father was the head of the CPUSA...his three uncles were heads of math departments at Princeton, Brown and UChicago.
Maybe a book is in order for CP, knock his Queen off her throne!MR-7 » Today, 12:00 pm » wrote: ↑ First thing Fruity CP will say is its propaganda. Pooty will be gone soon.
Fuelman » Today, 11:39 am » wrote: ↑ Excellent find Johnny, worth the 22 minute listen.
When CP gets done with his cry fest over countries using proxies against Russia, he will address your post. We may have to put him on suicide watch.![]()
BTY, welcome to the Government Teat! It's not much but you can actually live on Ramen.
JuCo 5 percenter...72
“Show me the man and I’ll find you the crime” ~ LAVRENTIY BERIA
"Try to get past your passionate ignorance and learn to accept what actually happened." ~ brown's unheeded words of wisdom that’s gonna piss cp off!Fuelman » 41 minutes ago » wrote: ↑ Maybe a book is in order for CP, knock his Queen off her throne!
read Bill Browder’s latest book, Freezing Order: A True Story of Money Laundering, Murder, and Surviving Vladimir Putin’s Wrath.
A tense and gripping read, Freezing Order has everything you’d want in a thriller: murder, conspiracy, piles of dirty money, sexual intrigue, constant threat of assassination, abduction, extreme violence…
In other words, it reads like a high-octane Robert Ludlum novel of my youth, except for one thing.
It is all true.
The icing on top, Browder has Jew blood running in his veins.
JuCo 5 percenter...72
“Show me the man and I’ll find you the crime” ~ LAVRENTIY BERIA
"Try to get past your passionate ignorance and learn to accept what actually happened." ~ brown's unheeded words of wisdom Blackvegetable » Today, 12:28 pm » wrote: ↑ Bill Browder
His father was the head of the CPUSA...his three uncles were heads of math departments at Princeton, Brown and UChicago.
This young man has been on the Ukraine Russia Scene for at least a year. As the young ones go, he does not show a clairavoyant bias very much. Hios coverage of Hungary's elections was quite impressive and informative. He includes the backstory since the 1950's uprisings against the USSR. Hungary has not held many elections. The people won this one. We'll see what happens.Fuelman » Today, 11:39 am » wrote: ↑ Excellent find Johnny, worth the 22 minute listen.
When CP gets done with his cry fest over countries using proxies against Russia, he will address your post. We may have to put him on suicide watch.![]()
BTY, welcome to the Government Teat! It's not much but you can actually live on Ramen.
Sorry, I bailed after the seventh "Putin BEGGED."JohnnyYou » Today, 8:16 am » wrote: ↑ Well @Cannonpointer ? It looks to me like Putin is Quacking Up in lame duck oldism...
Caolan Robertson is a fine young man..Even @roadkill showed one of his videos once.... and dissappeared shortly afterward.
Ukraine is innovative.. Neccessity is the Mother of Invention. Give 'em back Crimea.. or Crimea River..
https://youtu.be/tYjbzo5QSTY?si=QoY9MOnnG5NXgEbB
This week feels like the beginning of something genuinely different. Just days after Russia’s deeply embarrassing Victory Day parade, where almost no major military hardware was shown, Moscow has now come under one of the biggest long-range attacks since the full-scale invasion began. One of Russia’s most protected oil refineries was hit at a time when the Kremlin is struggling more and more to convince its own people that this war is still a success. That doesn’t mean the war is ending anytime soon. But it does mean something important: Russia suddenly looks weak, both inside and outside the country. I just got back from Venice a few days ago, where Russians seemed desperate to project strength to the world through culture, influence, and propaganda. But after spending time around it all, what struck me most was that the messaging no longer feels aimed at the West. It feels aimed inward. The propaganda now seems focused on reassuring Russians themselves that everything is still under control. This week, I spoke to Bill Browder about what he believes is happening inside Russia right now, why the Kremlin is becoming increasingly obsessed with controlling perception, and what that tells us about the state of Russian society today. I hope you enjoy the report. If you do, please consider subscribingMost of my reporting focuses on the front lines in Ukraine and Russia’s wider propaganda war across Europe. I’ll also be publishing a major documentary this week filmed in Nikopol, right beside Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, looking at how Russia has weaponized the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant during the war. Thank you so much for watching. My links are here 🫡
https://linktr.ee/CaolanRobertson
Clearly, you share prescriptions with johnny. You're both high on the same dope.Fuelman » Today, 11:39 am » wrote: ↑ Excellent find Johnny, worth the 22 minute listen.
When CP gets done with his cry fest over countries using proxies against Russia, he will address your post. We may have to put him on suicide watch.![]()
BTY, welcome to the Government Teat! It's not much but you can actually live on Ramen.
That's odd. A comnist, and he sides with the fascists?Blackvegetable » Today, 12:28 pm » wrote: ↑ Bill Browder
His father was the head of the CPUSA...his three uncles were heads of math departments at Princeton, Brown and UChicago.
Three outstanding mathematicians..
Jews throw an out-sized crop of geniuses AND an outsized crop of idiots.Blackvegetable » 12 minutes ago » wrote: ↑ Three outstanding mathematicians..
That's some high test baby batter...
If math always existed, and was neither invented or discovered.. why doe Putin push disinformation on the economy there.Blackvegetable » 12 minutes ago » wrote: ↑ Three outstanding mathematicians..
That's some high test baby batter...
Cannonpointer » 12 minutes ago » wrote: ↑ Jews throw an out-sized crop of geniuses AND an outsized crop of idiots.
To assume a fellow is a genius OR an idiot for being born jewish would be foolish.
Just as we do not engage in attainders of blood in this country, likewise we do not assume a man's leakage is his likeness.