2019-02-22 at 11:39 AM UTC
they got tired of fucking themselves, now they focus on fucking others.
2019-02-22 at 11:59 AM UTC
mikeyagain
African Astronaut
[unalterably regard the persecutor]
We should send em some of our homeless, violent offenders, and depressed... Give till it hurts...
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2019-02-22 at 1:35 PM UTC
My gosh, their murder rate and death by alcohol are about the same. That’s insane.
2019-02-22 at 1:43 PM UTC
Grylls
Cum Looking Faggot
[abrade this vocal tread-softly]
which faggit makes up these stats
2019-02-22 at 2:05 PM UTC
germans & russians seem to always have overindulged in alcohol. granted, they seem to handle it somewhat better than many other breed of peoples— well, the irish, are another liquor toting lot. lol 😋
2019-02-22 at 2:09 PM UTC
Originally posted by MORALLY SUPERIOR BEING V: A Cat-Girl/Boy Under Every Bed
very interesting indeed.
it shows that beginning 2006 their cops just attributed all cause of death for all murders as 'alcohol poisoning'.
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2019-02-22 at 4:39 PM UTC
About as believable as a 90+% approval rating for King Vlad
2019-02-22 at 8:46 PM UTC
Looks like Russia is on a different path than the US...
2019-02-23 at 6:53 AM UTC
aldra
JIDF Controlled Opposition
lol, I had to look that reference up, then felt dumb for not taking it at face value.
AS I understand it in Russia, the Prime Minister (Medvedev) is chosen by the elected President (Putin). Putin and Medvedev have typically worked together; when one is president the other is PM (in Russian law a President can only serve two consecutive terms, but once someone else serves they can run again), which is bizarre because they have vastly different goals and approaches. Generally speaking Putin is a nationalist who values independence, whereas Medvedev wants to fold into the western 'system' because he believes that Russia (or at least some Russians) can prosper that way. It's especially strange because Russian society is currently fairly polarised in that regard, with Putin's approach being vastly more popular.
I've seen a bunch of articles discussing the matter but never actually gone through one
2019-02-23 at 7:23 PM UTC
I just finished a good book, "I'm going to ruin their lives", although they,(Medvedev & Putin) appear to have different agendas at times, both have the same end goals. It's all been perfectly planned to create an aura of there being "more autonomy" as opposed to the same brand of United Russia. You can't help feel sorry for those that actually thought there was going to be change by Medvedev becoming President. Putin has been the all omnipotent power house since 1999 in one form or another and people have gotten use to, and would feel a sense of loss without him. The same was felt by many surprisingly in 1953 when Stalin died. By playing upon the national sentiment of patriotism and anti westernism, he's created a fatherly persona and a need to keep him.
I personally think Putin wanting to stay in power is more him ensuring he stays out of jail should the tide of power were ever to fall into the hands of say someone like Navalny albeit this would be impossible in certainly Putin's lifetime. The fact is too much heat has been brought upon him through all these high level assassinations, there's only so many times that card can be played before it back fires. The Boris Nemtsov murder was far too brazen.
I do believe this will be Putin's last term before taking up a shadow position like the P-2 masonic lodge in Italy, controlling puppet presidents and deciding what goes.