Sooo....no talk on Kiev's gradual descent into Mad Max beyond Thunderdome status??

Leasy

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Man instead of discussing these rich cronies and the countries they run. What should we do in regards to finding a solution on moving to a young developing country?
 

Kritic

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Man instead of discussing these rich cronies and the countries they run. What should we do in regards to finding a solution on moving to a young developing country?
everywhere is fuqqed. the whole world is addicted to western civilization. it's gonna hard just moving some place and starting all over.
we worship money. money is the new god. we can't get enough of it.

the only way is dropping this money culture and pick some "primitive" location that's untouched.. which is basically no where.

unless you wanna move to an amish community. they seem to be pure people...
 

Leasy

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Philly (BYRD GANG)
everywhere is fuqqed. the whole world is addicted to western civilization. it's gonna hard just moving some place and starting all over.
we worship money. money is the new god. we can't get enough of it.

the only way is dropping this money culture and pick some "primitive" location that's untouched.. which is basically no where.

unless you wanna move to an amish community. they seem to be pure people...

I move to a farm or the tribes of the amazon as long as my fam can go stress free
 

Kritic

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I move to a farm or the tribes of the amazon as long as my fam can go stress free
i saw an amish reality show in one of those history/discovery/mtv channels. and they were mocking and taking advantage of them. i didn't like the way they were fuqqin with them with that reality show shyt.
all these filthy reality show just make me angry really. and these "backward" ppl don't know any better. so i'm just over there fuming for these ppl... everytime i turn on the tv i just get angry..
 

Kritic

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Russia & China: ‘No to sanctions rhetoric, regime change in other countries’
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Moscow and Beijing have rejected the imposition of sanctions as political tools and condemned attempts at “encouraging and financing” regime changes in other countries in a joint statement released during President Putin’s official visit to China.

Having faced economic sanctions and threats of more of to come from the West, Russia has turned to the East, seeking to boost business ties in a friendlier environment. An impressive package of deals on energy, business and infrastructure has already been signed in Shanghai.

More is yet to come, judging by the title of the joint statement by Beijing and Moscow, which promises “a new stage in full-scale partnership and strategic relations.”
Russia & China: ‘No to sanctions rhetoric, regime change in other countries’ — RT News
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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WEB-donetsk.jpg

Planeloads of troops depart areas near Ukraine, Russia says
VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV AND ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICHENKO

SLOVYANSK, Ukraine — The Associated Press

Published Thursday, May. 22 2014, 4:03 AM EDT

Last updated Thursday, May. 22 2014, 1:18 PM EDT

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  • AA

Several trains carrying weapons and planeloads of troops have left regions near Ukraine as part of a massive military pullout, the Russian Defence Ministry said Thursday, even as fighting raged between pro-Russian insurgents and government forces in eastern Ukraine.

The ministry said four trainloads of weapons and 15 Il-76 heavy-lift transport planes left the Belgorod, Bryansk and Rostov regions on Wednesday. The troops are to reach their permanent bases before June 1, the ministry added.

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NATO, which estimates that Russia has 40,000 troops along the border with Ukraine, said Thursday it has seen limited Russian troop activity near the Ukraine border that may suggest some Russian forces are preparing to withdraw.

“We’ve seen limited Russian troop activity (in the) vicinity of (the) Ukraine border that MAY suggest that some of these forces are preparing to withdraw,” Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said on Twitter, emphasizing the word ‘may’.

Russian President Vladimir Putin scoffed at NATO’s skepticism, saying Wednesday that the pullout involving large numbers of troops would take time and “those who aren’t seeing it should look better.” He said the pullout will be clearly visible in satellite images.

The announcement went further than an earlier step by the Russian leader two weeks ago, when he said the troops retreated from the border to shooting ranges.

Putin’s pullout order and his remarks welcoming Ukraine’s presidential election this Sunday reflected an attempt to ease tensions with the West over Ukraine and avoid a new round of Western sanctions.

Pro-Russian insurgents in the east, who have seized government buildings and engaged in clashes with government troops that have left scores dead since April, on Thursday continued battling the Ukrainian forces around Slovyansk, the eastern city that has been the epicenter of fighting.

Security sources said 13 servicemen were killed and 18 injured Thursday in a clash that occurred in the early hours 20 kilometres south of the industrial hub of Donetsk where rebels have declared a "people’s republic."

In the village of Semenovka on the outskirts of Slovyansk, artillery shelling that appeared to come from government positions badly damaged several houses.

Zinaida Patskan, 80, had the roof of her house torn by an explosion, which also shattered one of the walls. “Why they are hitting us?” she said, bursting into tears. “We are peaceful people!”

Patskan, who wasn’t hurt, said she was hiding under a kitchen table with her cat, Timofey, when the shelling came.

About a hundred Semenovka residents later vented their anger against the central government, demanding that the Ukrainian forces cease their offensive and withdraw from the region. Speakers at the rally also called for boycotting the presidential vote.

Many in the east resent the government in Kyiv, which came to power after the ouster of a pro-Russian president in February following mass of protests, seeing it as a bunch of nationalists bent on repressing Russian speakers. But many local residents have grown increasingly exasperated with the rebels, whom they blamed for putting civilians in the crossfire.

Pro-Russian rebels have declared two regions independent following referendums dismissed as a sham by Ukraine and the West, and some called for joining Russia. Putin has ignored the plea as he sought to ease the worst crisis in Russia’s relations with the West since the Cold War.

The United States and the European Union imposed travel bans and asset freezes on members of Putin’s entourage after Russia annexed Crimea in March. The U.S. and EU have warned that more crippling sanctions against entire sectors of the Russian economy would follow if Russia tries to grab more land or attempts to derail Ukraine’s election.

Moscow has supported a peace plan brokered by Switzerland and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which envisages a broad amnesty and the launch of a national dialogue that focuses on the decentralization of government and upholding the status of the Russian language.

Russia also has pushed for guarantees that Ukraine will not join NATO and has advocated constitutional reforms that would give broader powers to the regions, which would maintain Moscow’s clout in the Russian-speaking eastern regions that form the nation’s industrial heartland.

With a file from Reuters
 

Wargames

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i saw an amish reality show in one of those history/discovery/mtv channels. and they were mocking and taking advantage of them. i didn't like the way they were fuqqin with them with that reality show shyt.
all these filthy reality show just make me angry really. and these "backward" ppl don't know any better. so i'm just over there fuming for these ppl... everytime i turn on the tv i just get angry..

That Amish show was the stupidest thing I've ever seen on TV. :upsetfavre:

I felt embarass to be watching it:snoop:

But the fukkery was too insane not bear to witness to. :ohlawd:
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Chechen Militants Are Now Spreading Chaos In Ukraine

  • MAY 28, 2014, 12:09 PM
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chechen-fighter.jpg

Wikimedia Commons

A Chechen fighter during the battle for Grozny.


Dozen of Chechens are now reportedly fighting alongside pro-Russian militants in eastern Ukraine in at attempt to cause further instability, Courtney Weaver of the Financial Times reports.


The Chechens, which Russian-backed Chechen president Ramzan Kadyrov allegedly dispatched to Ukraine's restive east, are a new face of Russia's interference in the country. Since the militants are not formal Russian soldiers, Russia can continue to deny its links to separatists in Ukraine.

“If they are Chechens, they are citizens of the Russian Federation. We can’t control where our citizens go,” a Russian foreign ministry official told the Financial Times. “But I can assure you that we have not sent our forces there.”

Chechen fighters had reportedly taken part in the battle at the Donetsk airport, in which more than 50 pro-Russian separatists were killed during a heavy Ukrainian assault.

The presence of Chechens in Ukraine is worrying for a number of reasons. Chechen militants are known for being well-trained and formidable fighters. Chechnya was a war zone for most of the period between 1994 to 2009, and many Chechen militants received training from foreign jihadists who were assisting in the mostly-Muslim separatist movement's fight against Moscow.

Chechen fighters are also known for using incredibly brutal tactics. Terrorists from the region were responsible for a 2004 attack on a Russian school that left more than 300 dead.

The inclusion of Chechens also signals that the crisis in Ukraine could widen. Serbian ultra-nationalists already flocked to Crimea during the Russian invasion of the peninsula to help ensure order during the referendum that led to Russia's annexation of the region.

The Chechens, for their part, have sworn revenge against the Ukrainian government for the death of one of their militiamen in Donetsk.

“They’ve killed one of our guys and we will not forget this,” one Chechen fighter told the Financial Times. “We will take one hundred of their lives for the life our brother.”


Read more: Chechen Militants Are Spreading Chaos In Ukraine - Business Insider
 
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