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#russian brutality
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My beloved city, we will definitely endure💙💛The last few days have been the toughest nights of the entire war. The aggressors have attacked us with missiles and Shaheed. I feel such a mixture of pain and pride for our people.
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Last night,
my niece stayed over,
and when the explosions began,
I hesitated to wake the child.
I sat on the floor next to her bed, prepared to shield her with my body if needed.
The attacks intensified, and eventually,
I had to wake her up.
My dog ❤️ lay at our feet,
we all sat on the floor together,
hoping for God's protection 🙏 and relying on our Ukrainian Air Defense💙💛.
You know, after such nights, my questions are not directed at God, nor at ordinary people, or even the aggressors.
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My one question is for the world leaders: why do you say that we cannot use Western weapons to attack russians territory ?
⭐Do you consider the lives of our people less valuable?
⭐ Have you ever shielded your children with your own body?
⭐Why has everyone forgotten about Kherson, Bucha, Mariupol?
⭐Why isn't the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant equally terrifying?
After such sleepless nights for our children, 💥we have every right to wipe the kremlin off the face of the earth. 💥
I feel the pain for our people, but we are not broken 💪 .
We continue to move forward.
There's still champagne in the fridge that I will open on Victory Day.
I love you, my city❤️you are our fortress, you give us strength🫶
#Odesa
#GloryToGod
#GlorytoAFU
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edgar-allan-ho · 1 year
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2 Russian rockets fell on polish territory and yall westerns don't do shit.
Ofc ao3 or some fucking celebrity is trening on this shitshow website, but no word ab. Poland.
Fuck you.
Edit:
Sorry for my offensive choice of words, my friends just have told me this, so I went on Tumbrl and checked if this topic was trending.
It concerned me how hardly anyone was even mentioning it (although, it happened at around 10 pm in eastern european timezone).
Investigations are being conducted, my civics teacher assumes that we're far from WWIII (yet, it's not a reliable source).
But, please, raise awareness about the russian aggression and don't panic.
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biblixphilia · 4 months
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темная ночь
(photo by me)
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antishoegaze · 5 months
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russian doll winter
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maydayistactile · 6 months
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corp (se)
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piroshky · 1 year
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Kola Peninsula, Céline Clanet.
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6soul6sucker6 · 7 months
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tomorrowusa · 5 months
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One thing we have to admit about Putin's Russia, it treats its own citizens just as badly as it treats its neighbors.
In early November, 19-year-old Russian conscript Andrei Lazhyev died at a naval hospital in Sevastopol, home of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet in the illegally annexed territory of Crimea. The recent university graduate's death came just a little more than four months after he was drafted into the Russian military, and was officially determined to be the result of swelling and hemorrhage of the brain, according to documents reviewed by RFE/RL's North.Realities. His parents -- who were not allowed to see Andrei after he was hospitalized -- have never been told how or when he received the injuries that killed their son and have yet to receive his body. [ ... ] In late September, less than a month after Andrei informed his parents that he had completed his military training in Russia and was being transferred with other conscripts to Crimea, he called to tell them that he was in a field hospital. "He didn't know where exactly he was," Nikolai Lazhyev, Andrei's father, told RFE/RL. "He only said that everyone lived in tents in a field, and there were mountains around. He said that he felt very bad and complained of constant nausea."
Going directly from basic training to being in a field hospital is certainly not a good sign.
The parents eventually learned that Andrei was discharged from the hospital within a few days and was transferred two weeks later, on October 6, to Armyansk, a town in northern Crimea. From there the parents had no word of their son's situation until, on October 23, Nikolai was contacted on social media by a man who claimed to be Andrei's hospital roommate. The man told Nikolai that Andrei had been admitted to the naval hospital in Sevastopol around October 8 and was in grave condition -- unable to walk or see properly, and constantly vomiting. During a call, the roommate handed his phone to Andrei, who told his father that he had lost his phone and did not recall what happened to him or how he got to the hospital. When the roommate sent a photograph of Andrei, the young conscript's parents were shocked. "We didn't even recognize him at first. The sight was terrible," Nikolai said, saying that while his son weighed more than 100 kilograms when he was drafted he looked in the image like he weighed less than 60.
Losing 40% of one's weight is something we'd associate with a serious disease or injury. It's another sign of maltreatment.
Back to Andrei's parents.
"They told me that Andrei allegedly did not want to serve to such an extent that he had something like a nervous breakdown," Nikolai said. "They called it 'homesickness syndrome.'" But the psychiatrist also revealed that he had noticed obvious signs of beatings on Andrei's body," according to Nikolai. [ ... ] Nikolai managed to contact a medical worker who had treated his son and was told that Andrei suffered from cerebral edema and hemorrhage. Nevertheless, Nikolai recalled, he was told that while his son might "need some medicine" Andrei was in good hands because the naval hospital had "everything." In further conversations the hospital authorities, Andrei's parents were told they could not visit the facility because Sevastopol was located in the war zone amid Russia's ongoing war with Ukraine, but doctors promised he would be evacuated to safer ground. The evacuation never came -- the family was told that Andrei's condition was too serious. Finally, on November 1, Nikolai and his wife obtained the documents needed to visit the hospital, but it was too late. The next day, while at a Moscow airport en route to Crimea, they learned that Andrei had died.
The army there has had a long history of brutality dating back to Soviet times.
Some clarity came within a couple days. A man who introduced himself as a commander contacted Nikolai through Telegram. Without revealing his name or rank, the man sent a photo of Andrei's death certificate that showed he died from "cerebral edema, internal hemorrhage of the brain stem." "It was written there in black and white," Nikolai said, saying the document revealed the diagnosis had been known for a month before Andrei died. "Why this swelling happened is unknown," Nikolai said. "My son lay dying for a whole month, and they did not report anything. If he had been evacuated, I think he would be alive [today]." [ ... ]
Nikolai, a former military man himself, said that following Andrei's death, he simply cannot trust the authorities. "I can't believe them, I can't, that's all," Nikolai said. Nikolai has still not received any official documents from the Defense Ministry regarding his son's service and death, his requests for information have gone unanswered, and Andrei's body has yet to be returned home. These factors have led Nikolai to reach the conclusion that his son died after an attempt to force him to sign up for combat abroad.
Putin wants Ukraine at all costs and it doesn't matter to him how many Russians he needs to kill to achieve his goal. Human wave attacks have been used against Ukraine. Essentially, Putin regards his troops as disposable.
Putin is tolerating losses like these just so he can think of himself as the 21st century version of Peter the Great. He's clearly a sociopathic megalomaniac.
Vladimir Putin 'stepping up invasion' in Ukraine as Russia sees almost 1,000 casualties a day
If you are a male in Russia who's in danger of conscription, your only sane option is to leave the country.
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night-for-night · 7 months
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svetlana kopystiansky @ zimmerli art museum, rutgers
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aupermittymeowmeow · 1 year
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yall cannot tell me you did not think that one scene was Christain Brutal Sniper in Emesis Blue
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anticbrvtalist · 1 year
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Arseniy Kotov - Man and the portal
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gloomy-solitude · 3 months
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yvehattan · 2 years
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Dmitri Prokofych Razumikhin. Crime and Punishment.
Carrying Raskolnikov around St. Petersburg, looking after his pathetic self, and becoming a surrogate son to Pulcheria and Dunya wrecked havoc on Razumikhin’s posture: his shoulders really do ache.
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maydayistactile · 1 month
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doomsday ditch
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piroshky · 1 year
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Kola Peninsula, Céline Clanet.
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