Anonymous wrote:![]()
Somehow, to the traitor Trump, the US is the bad guy here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lenin flee Tsarist Russia from 1907 to 1917. He returned a month after the Tsar was toppled. Navalny potentially could have done the same. When Putin dies perhaps there would be a power vacuum and Navalny’s time would have come. Now he will fade into obscurity just like:
Litveneko died of polonium-210 poisoning in London in 2006
Prigozhin former Wagner leader who supposedly negotiate a truce with Putin. His plane exploded
Nemstov, former opposition leader with ties to Yeltsin, shot four times in the back by an unknown assailant within view of the Kremlin
Anna Politkovskaya- journalist and critic of Putin shot in her apartment building in Moscow in 2006.
Plenty of others who allegedly have committed suicide or fallen out of tall buildings.
Navalny shouldn’t have returned. Good chance his body is never released or found because Putin wouldn’t want his gravesite to become a symbol of resistance.
You think Nemtsov has been forgotten? They were laying roses for navalny at the spot where nemtsov was shot. I suppose you also think Mandelstam was forgotten. Just because Americans don’t know these names doesn’t mean they are forgotten. Russians remember. At this point, I don’t know what the average Russian can do though. The noose is already too tight. There may be an end game with the sanctions …. I think Putin has been financially living on borrowed time and I don’t know that selling oil to India and China is enough to prop up the whole thing. He’s very in debt. There may come a day when the house of cards starts to topple and someone on the inside pulls the trigger on regime change. There was also a lot of speculation that he had cancer a year or two ago but I’m not seeing it — he looks pretty healthy although stuffed with filler and Botox.
It’s not just oil
Russia is a world leader in so many primary resources for human existence
Oil, gas, uranium, wood, fertilizer, wheat, I could go on but Russia is exceptionally blessed with resources
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lenin flee Tsarist Russia from 1907 to 1917. He returned a month after the Tsar was toppled. Navalny potentially could have done the same. When Putin dies perhaps there would be a power vacuum and Navalny’s time would have come. Now he will fade into obscurity just like:
Litveneko died of polonium-210 poisoning in London in 2006
Prigozhin former Wagner leader who supposedly negotiate a truce with Putin. His plane exploded
Nemstov, former opposition leader with ties to Yeltsin, shot four times in the back by an unknown assailant within view of the Kremlin
Anna Politkovskaya- journalist and critic of Putin shot in her apartment building in Moscow in 2006.
Plenty of others who allegedly have committed suicide or fallen out of tall buildings.
Navalny shouldn’t have returned. Good chance his body is never released or found because Putin wouldn’t want his gravesite to become a symbol of resistance.
You think Nemtsov has been forgotten? They were laying roses for navalny at the spot where nemtsov was shot. I suppose you also think Mandelstam was forgotten. Just because Americans don’t know these names doesn’t mean they are forgotten. Russians remember. At this point, I don’t know what the average Russian can do though. The noose is already too tight. There may be an end game with the sanctions …. I think Putin has been financially living on borrowed time and I don’t know that selling oil to India and China is enough to prop up the whole thing. He’s very in debt. There may come a day when the house of cards starts to topple and someone on the inside pulls the trigger on regime change. There was also a lot of speculation that he had cancer a year or two ago but I’m not seeing it — he looks pretty healthy although stuffed with filler and Botox.
Anonymous wrote:Justice for Navalny: We need to make sure the CIA pays out his pension to his wife and kids. Don't let them disavow him like some no-name asset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HBO did a great documentary a year or so on him, I highly recommend it. I didn’t know much about him, and I do get the controversy around him but he was definitely poisoned by Putin’s agent on that airplane.
His wife was able to get him transferred to Germany and this is sort of where the documentary starts. He has 2 children. I couldn’t understand why he insisted on going back to Russia when he could have stayed in Germany. He gets on a plane, with press and his wife and as soon as they land in Russia he’s arrested and he was in custody ever since.
I don’t agree at all with Putin or Russian politics. But when you have children, to me it was crazy that he left them again. You just knew he would die. And now he has. It’s very sad. probably won’t change anything re how the world deals with Putin.
I totally agree. He could have done more good by continuing to post anti-Putin messages from abroad. It made zero sense to go back to Russia. It was 100% predictable he was going to die. And changes nothing now.
Navalny was only 47 and Putin is 71. He just needed to wait Putin out.
It would have made more sense for him to live and wait Putin out. He could have done much more, and now Putin has “won.”
Putin’s men will murder wives and children overseas. Navalny likely went back to spare his family a brutal death. He received a very clear message that his family was next.
Germany is not safe, elites are compromised by Russia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HBO did a great documentary a year or so on him, I highly recommend it. I didn’t know much about him, and I do get the controversy around him but he was definitely poisoned by Putin’s agent on that airplane.
His wife was able to get him transferred to Germany and this is sort of where the documentary starts. He has 2 children. I couldn’t understand why he insisted on going back to Russia when he could have stayed in Germany. He gets on a plane, with press and his wife and as soon as they land in Russia he’s arrested and he was in custody ever since.
I don’t agree at all with Putin or Russian politics. But when you have children, to me it was crazy that he left them again. You just knew he would die. And now he has. It’s very sad. probably won’t change anything re how the world deals with Putin.
I totally agree. He could have done more good by continuing to post anti-Putin messages from abroad. It made zero sense to go back to Russia. It was 100% predictable he was going to die. And changes nothing now.
Navalny was only 47 and Putin is 71. He just needed to wait Putin out.
It would have made more sense for him to live and wait Putin out. He could have done much more, and now Putin has “won.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HBO did a great documentary a year or so on him, I highly recommend it. I didn’t know much about him, and I do get the controversy around him but he was definitely poisoned by Putin’s agent on that airplane.
His wife was able to get him transferred to Germany and this is sort of where the documentary starts. He has 2 children. I couldn’t understand why he insisted on going back to Russia when he could have stayed in Germany. He gets on a plane, with press and his wife and as soon as they land in Russia he’s arrested and he was in custody ever since.
I don’t agree at all with Putin or Russian politics. But when you have children, to me it was crazy that he left them again. You just knew he would die. And now he has. It’s very sad. probably won’t change anything re how the world deals with Putin.
I totally agree. He could have done more good by continuing to post anti-Putin messages from abroad. It made zero sense to go back to Russia. It was 100% predictable he was going to die. And changes nothing now.
Navalny was only 47 and Putin is 71. He just needed to wait Putin out.
Anonymous wrote:Lenin flee Tsarist Russia from 1907 to 1917. He returned a month after the Tsar was toppled. Navalny potentially could have done the same. When Putin dies perhaps there would be a power vacuum and Navalny’s time would have come. Now he will fade into obscurity just like:
Litveneko died of polonium-210 poisoning in London in 2006
Prigozhin former Wagner leader who supposedly negotiate a truce with Putin. His plane exploded
Nemstov, former opposition leader with ties to Yeltsin, shot four times in the back by an unknown assailant within view of the Kremlin
Anna Politkovskaya- journalist and critic of Putin shot in her apartment building in Moscow in 2006.
Plenty of others who allegedly have committed suicide or fallen out of tall buildings.
Navalny shouldn’t have returned. Good chance his body is never released or found because Putin wouldn’t want his gravesite to become a symbol of resistance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Can we swing India over to the boycott?
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Probably not. America and Europe are insisting that countries have to pay more for energy and other 'green' policies. This means staying poor and getting poorer.
So long as the West is praying in the church of global warming, other countries will be favorable towards Russia and China.
Anonymous wrote:
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.Drill, less oil and gas revenue for Russia. Also less money for Iran, and they won't have as much 5capacity to develop drones for Russia.
He inflicted on Russia it's biggest losses since World War 2(until the last few years in Ukraine). This is when Mattis called up and asked about troops in Syria and his counterpart said they were mercenaries and had nothing to do with them. Mattis hung up and killed them within the hour., having already launched forces from a base in Africa before he even made the call.
Anonymous wrote: Can we swing India over to the boycott?