lazy is going to nato.com and posting their propaganda as fact in a forum
talk about lazyyou didn't even use your brain
Russia, of course, is still claiming they have no troops at all there, making the Ukrainians look more credible.
lazy is going to nato.com and posting their propaganda as fact in a forum
talk about lazyyou didn't even use your brain
everyone getting a piece of the cuck
hey RG, where's Summers? I need a quick and easy .
Busting out the smiley faces.
I accept your surrender.
Tweedle dee chimed in, and now we have tweedle dum.
I accept your surrender as well.
Do you always give up this quickly? Or just this once?
If my ideas and ideology were that poorly supported by actual evidence, I wouldn't try hard to defend it either.
"sokay, I understand. Reading is hard 'n' stuff.
Tell that I'm ready
apparently so does Ukraine![]()
let's take a look at the events that made Putin send his support and troops to protect Russian speakers in Ukraine.
The Odessa Massacre of May 2nd.
new Ukraine government in Kiev orders to take over buildings occupied by Russian speakers who opposed the new government. In odessa, Russian speakers staying at the Trade Union Building are attacked, the building is burnt to the ground:
Ukraine nationalist neonazis herding Russians to the burning building
Pravy Sector members (Ukraine nationalists) firing at Russians in the building
neonazis and nationalists beating Russians who jumped off the windows of the building
there's your dear Kiev government
Last edited by cheguevara; 09-10-2014 at 01:19 AM.
No, lazy is not responding in kind with any factual data from a reputable source. You're an idiot. There aren't enough "lolz" or emoticons in the world to change that.
Finally, from the peanut gallery, we have an admission of Russias direct involvement in the Ukraine.
loco, stick to playing around in nuclear reactors because the radiation is obviously affecting the part of your brain that tries to understand politics.
The Kiev junta is s ing citizens, and if you thought Putin was going to let us bring Ukraine into NATO then you are the dumbest so called scientist I have ever met.
no . he did annex Crimea genius.
try to catch up
"I have nothing against Russian nationalists, or a great Russia," said Dmitry, as we sped through the dark Mariupol night in a pickup truck, a machine gunner positioned in the back. "But Putin's not even a Russian. Putin's a Jew."
Dmitry – which he said is not his real name – is a native of east Ukraine and a member of the Azov battalion, a volunteer grouping that has been doing much of the frontline fighting in Ukraine's war with pro-Russia separatists. The Azov, one of many volunteer brigades to fight alongside the Ukrainian army in the east of the country, has developed a reputation for fearlessness in battle.
From The Guardian
http://www.theguardian.com/world/201...aine-neo-nazis
This'll put some heroine in m<s cough syrup. Tell the board when your head stops spinning Nazi.
Last edited by pgardn; 09-10-2014 at 11:14 PM.
this cyber attack is crippling the US
Meanwhile, you and your buddies maintain that no invasion has taken place. Pick a lane.
Ukraine’s ‘Romantic’ Nazi Storm Troopers
The U.S. mainstream media’s deeply biased coverage of the Ukraine crisis – endlessly portraying the U.S.-backed coup regime in Kiev as “the good guys” – reached a new level of absurdity over the weekend as the Washington Post excused the appearance of Swastikas and other Nazi symbols among a Ukrainian government militia as “romantic.”
This curious description of these symbols for unspeakable evil – the human devastation of the Holocaust and World War II — can be found in the last three paragraphs of the lead story in the Post’s Saturday editions, an article about Ukraine’s Azov battalion which has become best known for waging brutal warfare under Nazi and neo-Nazi insignia.
Nazi symbols on helmets worn by members of Ukraine’s Azov battalion. (Images filmed by a Norwegian camera team and shown on German TV)
However, if you didn’t know that reputation, you would have learned little about that grim feature of the Azov paramilitaries as you wound your way through the long story which began on Page One and covered half an inside page.
Post correspondent Anthony Faiola portrayed the Azov fighters as “battle-scarred patriots” who were nobly resisting “Russian aggression,” so determined to fight for Ukraine’s freedom that they threatened to resort to “guerrilla war.”
The article finds nothing objectionable about Azov’s plans for “sabotage, targeted assassinations and other insurgent tactics” against Russians, although such actions are often regarded as terrorism. Similar threats are directed even at the government of Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko if he agrees to a peace deal with the ethnic Russian east that is not to the militia’s liking.
“If Kiev reaches a deal with rebels that they don’t support, paramilitary fighters say they could potentially strike pro-Russian targets on their own — or even turn on the government itself,” the article states.
Incorruptible Freedom Fighters
The Post, which has avidly supported a Cold War-style confrontation with Russia over Ukraine, portrays Kiev’s so-called “voluntary battalions” as the true heroes of this international morality play, incorruptible freedom fighters angry about a potential sell-out by Poroshenko and other politicians far from the front lines.
So, you might have been a little unsettled to reach the inside jump of the story and see a photograph of a Swastika festooning one barracks of the Azov brigade. According to a variety of other news accounts, the Azov brigade also marches under the neo-Nazi Wolfsangel banner, a slight variant of a symbol used by the Nazi SS.
But the Post offers an excuse for the Swastika in the barracks. In the last three paragraphs, Faiola reported: “One platoon leader, who called himself Kirt, conceded that the group’s far right views had attracted about two dozen foreign fighters from around Europe.
“In one room, a recruit had emblazoned a swastika above his bed. But Kirt, a former hospitality worker, dismissed questions of ideology, saying that the volunteers — many of them still teenagers — embrace symbols and espouse extremist notions as part of some kind of ‘romantic’ idea.
“He insisted the group’s primary goal is defending its country against Russian aggression.”
Yet, whatever excuses the Post and other Western media offer – or how much they try to downplay the key role played by neo-Nazi militias in the U.S.-backed Kiev regime – the ugly reality is that Nazism, deeply rooted in western Ukraine since World War II, has been an integral part of the story since the crisis erupted last winter.
http://consortiumnews.com/2014/09/15...torm-troopers/
Too bad these "nazis" are actually good goys working for shekelstein although they don't know it
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