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#31
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08-01-2024, 09:03 AM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:7210 Join Date: Dec 2023 Posts: 28 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 38 Post(s)
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Re: Russian/Ukraine War Discussion Thread IX
Problem is, the west been lying to you all about Ukraine destroying Russia. The truth is, it's the opposite. I don't take any sides but I just want some of you blind folks in here to understand the truth. Ukraine are getting destroyed.
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#32
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08-01-2024, 09:07 AM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:7210 Join Date: Dec 2023 Posts: 28 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 38 Post(s)
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Re: Russian/Ukraine War Discussion Thread IX
Tax payers money are being spent and sent to Ukraine. USA and Nato got no business to interfere in the Russian - Ukraine war. They are just making things worse. If Trump becomes president he will at least try to make peace and that's all I want. You on the other hand, sitting behind your computer trying to act as a tough man, go ahead and travel to Ukraine and help them instead of sitting and hiding behind your computer.
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#34
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08-01-2024, 10:22 PM
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Re: Russian/Ukraine War Discussion Thread IX
The only thing Trump will try to do, is force Ukraine to capitulate( because he works for Putin ), appeasing the führer and probably ensuring a new, more deadly war down the line. All parties who are affected by this war can interfere, especially if requested by Ukraine. If your neighbor is beating his wife with a hammer, and you walk by, having a gun in your hand, would it be too crazy for you to respond to the screams for help? I guess you would walk by, smile and say...carry on, none of my business. |
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#35
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08-02-2024, 02:46 AM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:7210 Join Date: Dec 2023 Posts: 28 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 38 Post(s)
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Re: Russian/Ukraine War Discussion Thread IX
"I guess you would walk by, smile and say...carry on, none of my business." Don't guess when you don't know me. You are comparing apples with oranges. That's the dumbest comparison I've ever heard. If I see a women getting beat by a man on the streets you bet your ass I would interfere, but this is different. USA been sticking its nose into every war. Sooner or later they will get themselves into deep trouble. Since you talk big behind you computer, why don't you book a ticket and go to Ukraine and help them? The majority of people that ain't from Ukraine or Russia don't even know why this conflict started, they just decided to sit on their big butts and eat their pizza at home and listen to western media lies. |
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#36
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08-02-2024, 02:52 AM
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| My Rank: LANCE CORPORAL Poster Rank:2639 Join Date: May 2023 Posts: 160 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 85 Post(s)
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Re: Russian/Ukraine War Discussion Thread IX
I'm just waiting for WW3. Honestly, feels like the only thing worth a shit in this generation left. I just hope it happens before I get too old. I wouldn't fight for anything and anyone but America. But when duty calls, I can't wait to strap on a go pro and kill but possibly die for everything I love. Fuck growing old in this site. |
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#37
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08-02-2024, 04:19 AM
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Re: Russian/Ukraine War Discussion Thread IX
I see i got the same old reply "DoktorDoris" got, and many others. "why dont you go to Ukraine" - well, why dont I go? For the same reason most Ukrainians dont go. Noone wants war, no one wants to die. Easy...isnt it? Lucky for you, however, there are other, less deadly ways to help Ukraine. Sending weapons and aid. In that regard, i am helping....a little, but still helping. I work on an air defence system that uses drones to hunt down other drones. Now, Im not comparing apples to oranges....im comparing violence with violence. Your problem seems to be "scale". If one woman is being beaten and killed, then you would see a problem, and interfere. If a thousand women are being killed, then...thats fine in your book. Look, i get it. Russian KGB has poured billions into propaganda in US and sadly, that money buys something. Ive seen YouTube, Twitter and Facebook comments. Majority of those are from russian bot farms and talk exactly the same things you do. It even bought a US president. Russia spent millions every month to put Trump into office. Now they are spending even more. |
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#38
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08-02-2024, 04:25 AM
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Re: Russian/Ukraine War Discussion Thread IX
Evan Gershkovich, Paul Whelan and Alsu Kurmasheva stepped onto U.S. soil late Thursday at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, where they were greeted by President Biden and Vice President Harris. The three Americans were part of a prisoner swap involving seven countries, including the United States, Russia and Germany. Russia released 16 detainees in exchange for eight Russians held in other countries. These high level discussions on the prisoner swaps have went on for many months and have been said to have involved also trying to free Alexei Navalny earlier prior to his death. |
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#39
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08-02-2024, 04:33 AM
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Re: Russian/Ukraine War Discussion Thread IX
From Washington Post: Navalny team says he should be free in swap. Instead, he’s dead. Allies of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who unexpectedly died in a remote Arctic prison in February, welcomed the swap that freed several of his allies but expressed bitterness that Putin’s main political rival did not live to see freedom. Earlier this year, the politician’s allies said another deal was in the works in which Germany had been prepared to make the trade for Navalny, who recovered at a hospital in Berlin after he was poisoned in Russia with a banned nerve agent in 2020, but the opposition leader’s sudden death in February sent the parties back to the drawing board. “Yes, this is the very exchange within the framework of which — as we had hoped — Alexei Navalny was to be released in February this year,” his ally Leonid Volkov said Thursday in a statement on Telegram. Navalny’s wife and associates accused Putin of having him killed to prevent his release once Germany had signaled that a deal for Vadim Krasikov was possible. The Kremlin has denied any role in Navalny’s death. A high-ranking German official previously told The Post that the negotiations at the time had been “in the preparation phase.” Speaking at a news conference Thursday, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said Navalny was supposed to be a part of this deal, adding that he met with Evan Gershkovich’s parents on the day Navalny died to say they remained committed to freeing their son. Those released in the exchange include three former heads of Navalny’s regional headquarters that rallied his supporters to take on Russia’s ruling party and the Putin government: Lilia Chanysheva, Ksenia Fadeyeva and Vadim Ostanin. Also included in the deal was Ilya Yashin, a longtime political opposition leader and friend of Navalny’s since their earliest days in politics as fellow members of Yabloko, a liberal political party, in the early 2000s. “The ‘Navalny’s exchange’ eventually took place,” Volkov said. “But without Navalny. This is very painful.” Vice President Harris spoke Thursday with Yulia Navalnaya, the widow of Russian political opposition leader Alexei Navalny, about the release of 16 people from Russia, including Russian political prisoners who worked with Navalny. Harris praised Navalnaya for continuing her late husband’s work, according to a readout of the call distributed by the White House. The vice president, who met with Navalnaya in February, hours after news broke of her husband’s death in a Russian prison colony, also told her that she would “continue to stand with those fighting for freedom in Russia and around the world.” |