• hsdkfr734r@feddit.nl
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    2 days ago

    Meh. I don’t see much steering room for their course. It isn’t Russia by the way, it’s Putin and his regime.

    • ddplf@szmer.info
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      2 days ago

      It isn’t Russia by the way, it’s Putin and his regime.

      Oh be done with it already. Just go around and ask any Russian what they think of all that. I can tell you right now - You won’t find ANY ruskie who will be against Russia-Ukraine war, Putin AND the annexation of Crimea.

      You may find variations of these, but never the three at the same time. As a Polish person I can only tell one thing - you are NEVER to trust a Russian swine.

      • altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        You won’t find ANY ruskie who will be against Russia-Ukraine war, Putin AND the annexation of Crimea.

        We exist. But it’s right to asume one is a bastard or an indifferent enabler until proven otherwise. That’s a given.

    • Vikthor@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      As long as they control the government, military, police and other stuff putin and his regime are russia. If russians don’t like that they can make their own Maidan.

      • hsdkfr734r@feddit.nl
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        2 days ago

        That abstraction layer is correct, I think.

        The thing with abstraction layers is: they are made to simplify a context. This makes it easier to understand and to see correlations and processes. It also hides details of the picture.

        As far as I know there are people in Russia who work for their own goals. Those bridges don’t collapse themselves and it takes someone to derail a train or sabotage a helicopter or provide intelligence about movements.

        Yes. Most people just eat the propaganda or at least don’t act up to evade repression (if they would care enough to do so otherwise). That’s normal human behavior, it’s no Russian specialty. Can you think of a current critical situation which would need immediate wide-spread attention, but people tend to ignore it?