Politics

But this is really fun. Perhaps it is not very visible from the outside. The fact is that Russian society is very conservative and quite religious, in the form of Orthodoxy and Islam. And in general it looks like a society consisting of Rednecks. The topic of Eurovision is one of the debatable ones. Society treats it with disgust, some celebrities, on the contrary. Here is the reaction to this news in a row:

Natasha
7 hours ago
It's just some kind of holiday, not sanctions)))
Reply 45 0
Oleg Ivanov
6 hours ago
Finally, I will not see bearded whores!!!!
Answer 9 0
S P
7 hours ago
My God, yes! Was it really necessary to go to Kiev with tanks for this?!!!11
Reply 26 0
Leonid Kostin
7 hours ago
, I wonder what bonuses will be if we take, for example, Warsaw ?
Reply 8 0
Marina Oh
7 hours ago
Thank you!!!
Reply 35 0
Kashchey the Immortal
7 hours ago
at last! damn, no matter what sanctions, it is necessary to applaud those who introduce them standing up! all for the benefit of the Russian people! thank you very much!!!
Reply 24 0
Borisovich
7 hours ago
In eurogavno, Russia will no longer come.
Reply 21 0
Abyrvalg
7 hours ago
, we finally got rid of this vomit..
Reply 11 0
Alex Fierce
7 hours ago
That's it, there will be no faggot show. How to live now?? ))
Reply 11 0
Anton Tumanov
7 hours ago
I don't watch after Conchita Wurst
Reply 7 0
Colonel Redl
7 hours ago
Finally, it happened. A bearded "woman" and a Fart - we don't need such hockey.
Reply 7 0
Natasha
7 hours ago
I'll buy myself a snake or a turtle!

Out of all this I am not sure what I detest more - smashing young men and women so that their loved ones will never hear their voices again as a way to resolve international disputes; or listening to the voices of entertainers who collectively know only enough to get themselves paid to support their addictions. Either aspect of civilization lacks the essential quality that differentiates us from the animals we hunt.
 
This adds an interesting angle to the Russia Unkraine conversation.


Threatened by an uprising of his treacherous generals, the Christian Emperor Basil II, based in the glorious city of Byzantium, reached out to his enemies, the pagans over in the land of the Rus. Basil II was a clever deal maker. If Vladimir of the Rus would help him put down the revolt, he would give him the hand of his sister in marriage. This was a status changer for Vladimir: the marriage of a pagan to an imperial princess was unprecedented. But first Vladimir would have to convert to Christianity.
Returning to Kyev in triumph, Vladimir proceeded to summon the whole city to the banks of the river Dnieper for a mass baptism. The year is 988. This is the founding, iconic act of Russian Orthodox Christianity. It was from here that Christianity would spread out and merge with the Russian love of the motherland, to create a powerful brew of nationalism and spirituality. In the mythology of 988, it was as if the whole of the Russian people had been baptised. Vladimir was declared a saint. When the Byzantine empire fell, the Russians saw themselves as its natural successor. They were a “third Rome”.
Soviet Communism tried to crush all this — but failed. And in the post-Soviet period, thousands of churches have been built and re-built. Though the West thinks of Christianity as something enfeebled and declining, in the East it is thriving. Back in 2019, Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, boasted that they were building three churches a day. Last year, they opened a Cathedral to the Armed Forces an hour outside Moscow. Religious imagery merges with military glorification. War medals are set in stained glass, reminding visitors of Russian martyrdom. In a large mosaic, more recent victories — including 2014’s “the return of Crimea” — are celebrated. “Blessed are the peacemakers” this is not.

At the heart of this post-Soviet revival of Christianity is another Vladimir. Vladimir Putin. Many people don’t appreciate the extent to which the invasion of Ukraine is a spiritual quest for him. The Baptism of Rus is the founding event of the formation of the Russian religious psyche, the Russian Orthodox church traces its origins back here. That’s why Putin is not so much interested in a few Russian-leaning districts to the east of Ukraine. His goal, terrifyingly, is Kyev itself.
He was born in Leningrad — a city that has reclaimed its original saint’s name — to a devout Christian mother and atheist father. His mother baptised him in secret, and he still wears his baptismal cross. Since he became President, Putin has cast himself as the true defender of Christians throughout the world, the leader of the Third Rome. His relentless bombing of ISIS, for example, was cast as the defence of the historic homeland of Christianity. And he will typically use faith as a way to knock the West, like he did in this speech in 2013:
“We see many of the Euro-Atlantic countries are actually rejecting their roots, including the Christian values that constitute the basis of Western civilisation. They are denying moral principles and all traditional identities: national, cultural, religious and even sexual. They are implementing policies that equate large families with same-sex partnerships, belief in God with the belief in Satan.”
Putin regards his spiritual destiny as the rebuilding of Christendom, based in Moscow. When the punk band Pussy Riot wanted to demonstrate against the President, they chose to do so in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow, a vast white and gold edifice, demolished by the Soviets and rebuilt in the Nineties. It is a synthesis of Russia’s national and spiritual aspirations. It’s not just Russia, it is “Holy Russia”, part religious project, part extension of Russian foreign policy. Speaking of Vladimir’s mass baptism, Putin explained: “His spiritual feat of adopting Orthodoxy predetermined the overall basis of the culture, civilisation and human values that unite the peoples of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus.” He wants to do the same again. And to do this he needs Kyev back.


“The spiritual choice made by St Vladimir still largely determines our affinity today” Putin wrote only last year. “In the words of Oleg the Prophet about Kyev, “let it be the mother of all Russian cities”.
Into this religious intensity we can add some angry church politics. In 2019, the Ukrainian arm of the family of Orthodox churches declared its independence from the Russian Orthodox Church — and the nominal head of the Orthodox family, Bartholomew I of Constantinople, supported it. The Ukrainian president, Petro Poroshenko, described this as “a great victory for the devout Ukrainian nation over the Moscow demons, a victory of good over evil, light over darkness”.
The Russian Orthodox Church furiously rejected this claim to independence, stating that Ukraine belonged irrevocably to its “canonical territory”. This led to a historic split within the Orthodox family, with the Russian church rejecting the primacy of Bartholomew, declaring that they were no longer in communion with the rest of the Orthodox family. Russian Foreign Minister, Sergey Lavrov denounced Bartholomew as an American stooge. Kirill even claimed the reversion of the Hagia Sophia – originally the global HQ of Orthodoxy – to a mosque in 2020 was “God’s punishment”. The Russian Church then proceeded to set up its own Dioceses around the world, especially in Africa. “They are taking to the streets with posters saying “Thank you, Putin! Thank you, Patriarch Kirill!”” was how the Russian church’s propaganda machine described it.
Such is the centrality of Ukraine in general, and Kyev in particular, to the imagination of the Russian church, they have been prepared to fracture the centuries old alliance of Orthodoxy. Again and again, it’s all about Ukraine, the imagined site of the mother church of the Rus.
https://unherd.com/2022/02/how-european-hypocrisy-enables-putin/?=refinnar

This compliance of the Russian Orthodox church with the political goal of a greater Russia has been shameful. Officially, at least, they make a big deal out of the claim that they stay out of politics. But that has never been true. In the post-Soviet era, the Orthodox Church was handsomely rewarded, not just with a grandiose state-backed church building programme, but with involvement in lucrative business operations including the import of tobacco and alcohol worth $4 billion. In 2016, Krill was photographed wearing a $30,000 Breguet watch. He has also called Putin “a miracle of God”. When Kirill says “the Lord will provide” he could easily be talking about his lords and masters over in the Kremlin. Few churches have sold out to the state more completely than the Russian Orthodox church.
Last year, on the anniversary of the baptism of the Rus, Kirill preached to his people, urging them to stay true to Vladimir’s conversion and the blood of the orthodox martyrs. He told them to love “our homeland, our people, our rulers and our army”.
The Western secular imagination doesn’t get this. It looks at Putin’s speech the other evening, and it describes him as mad — which is another way of saying we do not understand what is going on. And we show how little we understand by thinking that a bunch of sanctions is going to make a blind bit of difference. They won’t. “Ukraine is an inalienable part of our own history, culture and spiritual space” Putin said. That’s what this is all about, “spiritual space” — a terrifying phrase steeped in over a thousand years of Russian religious history.
Rebuilding Christendom? A pretext for a neo-Crusade, attempting to make Israel a protectorate and attempting to re-establish Christian rule over the Holy Land?

I know there is some debate over who Gog will be and where he will come from. Many believe he will come from Russia. Given the events of the last century (and days) or so I could see it being Putin. If not him then at least possibly one of his allies


However, no man knows the hour or the day.

If so then Ukraine could just be the start. Given the weak leadership of the West we may witness Putin do pretty much whatever he pleases
 
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Where's Walt Disney when you need him?? Appears both Bidet and Putin are living in Fantasyland and billing the world for all of the rides.
My automatic translator translated "Bidet" as Trump. Why and who is to blame? But honestly, anyone lives in the Land of Fiction, even if they can read in different languages.
 
Imagine yourself- a young male in Russia, starting an apprenticeship in a machine shop. The President decides to start a war so you are drafted into the army as a private. Now you are sent to the Ukraine to participate in the conflict. As you approach the area of conflict you see a crematorium and the platoon sergeant tells the men that if/when they die, their remains will be cremated. So you have left your wife and child and if you die they won't even have a grave or marker to remember you.

Considering the apparent mentality of the leader, it looks to me that the army would have some very serious morale issues- particularly if stiff resistance is met from the Ukrainians and the Russians start taking casualties.
 
Put a $250 million dollar bounty on Putin's head, along with asylum. Maybe someone in his own country might be able to take him out ?
Worth every penny!
 
Put a $250 million dollar bounty on Putin's head, along with asylum. Maybe someone in his own country might be able to take him out ?
I'm not sure about the effectiveness of the bounty. Even without the bounty there was something like 40-50 attempts on Hitler's life. A few nearly got him, but none were successful. Some were well planned and equipped- it just seemed he had some sort of extra protection. Putin appears to have a lot in common with Hitler, so maybe he has the same arrangement with who/what ever the source of protection is.
 
I guess one needs to be from the US to get the meaning of Fantasyland and Walt Disney. Fantasyland is one of the themes in Disneyland.
You, Ray B, are slightly mistaken. Disneylands are known to everyone around the world, they or their unlicensed copies are everywhere. However, I was only in Gardaland, it's in Italy, and when I was in Paris, I didn't go to Disneyland, it seemed far away. The daughter, however, went.
Fantasy and science fiction are not confused by me, but by a machine translator. I write in Russian and translate, and it's not always possible to edit, especially now.
The images of American culture are also well known to everyone, the attitude towards them, however, is slightly ironic. Abroad, I wear a T-shirt with a hypno-toad - and, I must say, very unexpected people sometimes smile at her.
This is an important element of the "soft power" that the United States currently has.
 
274715202_7414501985234510_5431702582092906741_n.jpg
 
I'm not sure about the effectiveness of the bounty. Even without the bounty there was something like 40-50 attempts on Hitler's life. A few nearly got him, but none were successful. Some were well planned and equipped- it just seemed he had some sort of extra protection. Putin appears to have a lot in common with Hitler, so maybe he has the same arrangement with who/what ever the source of protection is.
Maybe towards the end, Putin will follow in Hitler's footsteps, and swallow a Cyanide pill.

One can only hope!
 
Hey @Vashper, If your translator is not working very well it would be best to use more caution in posting and response. Although many here seem to feel a need to accommodate you, be kindred spirit hunting buds and give benefit of the doubt, I have no idea the real meaning of most of your posts. Likewise you probably have no idea of the real meaning of what is being posted. I'll remain skeptical and pay no further attention to your posts.
 
Imagine yourself- a young male in Russia, starting an apprenticeship in a machine shop. The President decides to start a war so you are drafted into the army as a private. Now you are sent to the Ukraine to participate in the conflict. As you approach the area of conflict you see a crematorium and the platoon sergeant tells the men that if/when they die, their remains will be cremated. So you have left your wife and child and if you die they won't even have a grave or marker to remember you.

Considering the apparent mentality of the leader, it looks to me that the army would have some very serious morale issues- particularly if stiff resistance is met from the Ukrainians and the Russians start taking casualties.
Ray B, of course, you know better than me about the war - your country usually wages two or three wars at the same time, rarely one, we have a lower skill. But I probably won't discuss this topic at all anymore - the time is harsh, and I wouldn't like to frame Jerome.
 

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What a great way to kick off our 2025 hunting season in South Africa.

This beautiful Impala ram was taken at just over 300 yards, took a few steps and toppled over.

We are looking forward to the next week and a half of hunting with our first client of the year.
Handcannons wrote on Jaayunoo's profile.
Do you have any more copies of African Dangerous Game Cartridges, Author: Pierre van der Walt ? I'm looking for one. Thanks for any information, John buzzardhilllabs@hotmail.com
NRA benefactor, areas hunted, add congo, Mozambique3, Zambia2
Out of all the different color variations of Impala the black Impala just stands out with its beautiful pitch black hide.

Impala is one of the animals you will see all over Africa.
You can see them in herds of a 100 plus together.

This excellent ram was taken with one of our previous client this past season.

Contact us at Elite hunting outfitters to help you make your African safari dream come true..
 
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