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Before we start, I have two important messages for you.
One has to do with the updated YT speed-up guidelines.
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The waning days of 2024 saw two major tragedies. Dozens
of Azerbaijani and Russian nationals were killed in the Aktau air crash,
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while southern Russia was hit with a Black sea oil spill
in one of the largest environmental disasters in Russian history.
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I sincerely hope nothing is going to ruin your New Year celebrations
this time, but this wish can’t be really taken to the bank.
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Our Dec. 31, 2023, video turned sour
as we mourned the catastrophic loss of life.
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The Russian and Ukrainian armed forces exchanged
airstrikes that claimed the lives of dozens
of civilians on both sides of the fence.
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We chronicled the life and the tragic death
of Svetlana Gaydukova (Russia) and Viktor Kobzisty (Ukraine).
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This time,
as we are going through the holiday season, people keep dying.
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!New Year’s Eve Vibe!
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In the early hours of Dec. 20, the Russian missiles struck
the cities Kryvyi Rih, Kherson, and, most devastatingly, Kyiv.
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The world woke up to the gruesome footage
of the damaged St. Nicholas Roman Catholic Church.
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Now, Santa is largely based off of the figure of St. Nicholas.
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Striking the church just ahead of Christmas may have indeed
been part of the “duel” Putin had dared the West to the day before.
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If the Western experts you mentioned think otherwise,
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they should suggest to those in the West
and the United States who are paying them for their
analytical services to conduct a certain technological experiment,
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a high-tech 21st-century duel.
Let them choose a target in Kiev,
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deploy all their air defence and missile defence forces there, and we
will hit that target using an Oreshnik missile. We shall see what happens.
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At 11 A.M. Moscow time, Russia’s MoD commented
that the Kyiv attack was a retaliatory strike following
the Ukrainian forces hitting a factory in Rostov-on-Don.
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The Russian missiles allegedly targeted
the Kyiv-based Luch design bureau and the air defense systems.
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According to the MoD, all of the targets were hit.
Except the Kyiv footage suggested otherwise.
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Later that day, the Ukrainians responded with a non-selective
strike on Rylsk, a town of 15,000 in the Kursk Region.
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The missiles wrecked the residential property, claiming
the lives of at least six locals, including a child.
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You know, when all is calm and life is measured and stable,
we get bored.
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This amounts to stagnation, so we crave action.
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When action begins, time starts whistling by –
or bullets do, for that matter.
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Unfortunately, bullets are what is zipping past our heads these days.
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We are scared, yes – but not as 'all get out' kind of scared.
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Christmas day saw yet another deadly exchange.
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The Russian missiles and drones pounded
Kryvyi Rih, Kharkiv, Dnipro, and Kremenchuk.
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The Ukrainian army then pummeled Lgov,
another Kursk town, with a massive airstrike.
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The war-torn Kursk Region is this year’s Belgorod.
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The once-bucolic landscapes with huge
sunflower fields hadn’t seen combat action since 1943.
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However, these days, on top of the sunflower seed oil, the Kursk Region
has been a top supplier of chilling and gory news stories.
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In a recent video, we talked about the Sudzha social media group.
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Once a free announcement hub, it’s turned into a heavily
politicized online community of the Kursk Region residents
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that’s technically neither pro-war nor anti-war.
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Most of the posters and commenters are the local refugees.
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The government has turned its back on them
after some of them had their homes razed
while others were stranded in the Ukrainian-held territory.
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The devastated refugees’ stance is simple.
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They hate both Ukraine and Russia’s political leadership
along with its sycophantic propaganda mouthpieces.
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Like, they are being targeted by both sides.
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In November, the Sudzha online community
was instrumental in staging a protest rally in downtown Kursk.
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Russia’s media & comms watchdog ended up blocking
the pre-rally “let’s take a stroll” post and fining a refugee who,
they claimed, had masterminded the illegal gathering.
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Fellow refugees, however,
were quick to raise the money that covered the fine.
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Meanwhile, the anti-Ukrainian publications
were eclipsed by a deluge of Putin-bashing posts.
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Lately, the refugee community announced a new rally in Kursk.
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The media & comms watchdog then blocked the entire page,
even though it’s still accessible via a VPN.
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The latest posts addressed Putin’s “we crave action” comment.
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“Are we bored, southern Russia? Putin finally spiced
things up and did so with a smile, didn’t he?
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Putin lovers from afar,
go ahead and tell us that we don’t know a thing about politics.
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Lecture us on how we’re supposed to love our country.”
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The refugees blasted Putin’s end-of-the-year Q&A that mentioned
the Kursk Region and even a partially occupied portion thereof.
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Putin talked to a refugee named Tatyana Zibrova,
the resident of a war-stricken county.
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It was her fellow residents who joined the November rally in Kursk.
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Putin repeatedly told her that
“everything will be restored, there’s no doubt about that.”
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In closing, Putin referenced his new appointee,
Acting Governor Alexander Khinshtein.
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I genuinely hope that the new head of the region,
who has been appointed to the Kursk Region,
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is experienced and capable of effectively working with people.
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That is why I chose him, he has a long history of working in the State
Duma and directly with his voters, so he knows how to handle it.
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I expect that he will work with every person on an individual basis.
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However, the official has already told the Kursk residents
that the government was out of money to cover all the damage.
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After all, the government should be investing in arms production.
That’s what he said.
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He went on to say that if someone had their steam bath razed,
the government wouldn’t be reimbursing that luxury.
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The former long-time MP must be unaware
that outdoors steam baths in a rural area
are anything but a luxurious pastime for the rich officials.
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In fact, it’s used by those who can’t afford a shower.
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There must be a two-way interaction.
The government can't take charge of all the spending.
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We won't be reimbursing your wrecked steam baths.
Not that we don't want to.
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But imagine the number of villages, small towns,
schools, hospitals, stores, pharmacies, houses, etc. razed.
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Where are we supposed to get all those funds from?
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Meanwhile, the special operation is ongoing.
It's about advanced technology.
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We need to liberate the region.
Every single round of ammo comes at a price. These are all budget funds.
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Propagandist Vladimir Solovyov supported Khinshtein’s remarks
and took it a notch further by berating the locals brazen enough
to confront the governor as “demons and blackmailers.”
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Mr. Khinshtein is a great guy. We've known him for years.
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He's spending there day and night.
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Getting help from the federal government involves
a great deal of responsibility and effort.
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But look at these demons
who are now freaking out, eager to bite him.
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Those include [slur for Ukrainians] and local blackmailers.
The scheme is as follows. I'll stake my claim,
you give me the money, and I'll walk away.
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Jail them all.
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Who do they think they are, thse little demons?
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The commander-in-charge made his pick and appointed
the highly professional guy to this hardest of all jobs.
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So, these little demons are now trying to bargain
their petty things out of him. They’ll be dealt with.
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!Real-World Russia!
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The Russian leadership being out of touch with reality
was recently blown up by the pro-war blogging community.
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According to them, ahead of the annual live-streamed Q&A,
an online AI tool drew up the top 10 most burning questions.
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The top five issues included
retirement plans, healthcare, utility bills, and inflation.
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But the number one most pressing matter was the special operation’s
endgame and the future of the mobilized recruits.
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But quite predictably,
the four-and-a-half-hour presidential call-in talkathon
failed to address the top concern harbored by the Russian people.
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It never came up on the big screen,
even though a number of seemingly critical remarks did pop up,
as is evidenced by multiple screenshots available online.
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This is typically done to show that the whole event
ostensibly hasn’t been choreographed and scripted.
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But the words “mobilization”
and “mobilized recruits” must’ve been filtered out.
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It’s soon going to be the third time
many Russians will be greeting the coming year
without their husbands, dads, sons, brothers, or friends.
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At times, people may be misled
to believe the mobilized recruits are a non-issue.
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Except it has affected at least 300,000 Russians
who were forced onto the battlefield.
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They didn’t volunteer to sign a hefty contract.
But the reality is, it’s just faded out of the media spotlight.
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After all, it’s nothing new.
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For 27 months, the civilians who were lured and trapped
by the draft officers have been dying on the battlefied.
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We now know the names of the 10,105 forced recruits killed.
Sadly, it doesn’t sound like a baffling tragedy anymore.
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But these guys’ friends and families, millions of Russians, are still out there.
No wonder their plight was picked by the AI tool as the number one issue.
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The mobilization-themed questions, including video messages,
poured into the Q&A pool, only to be never brought up.
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The Kursk-gate is somehow being handled
by the government and the mainstream media.
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According to Putin,
the partially occupied lands aren’t a bug, but a feature.
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Like, the Ukrainian troops have been trapped
in a pocket and hemorrhaging entire divisions.
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But the good king will sure restore everything
and then some to his subjects.
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Putin’s appointee says, “Well, not really.” And then Solovyov
caps it with, “Who do you think you are, you blackmailers?”
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But the system can’t handled the mobilization concerns.
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No matter how many millions of Russians are being plagued
by these concerns, the government is absolutely ghosting the subject.
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Normally, we would’ve agreed with the pro-war bloggers on that.
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There’s a gaping chasm between the government and the people.
The Russian government is living on a different planet.
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But there’s nothing normal about it.
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Every time we clearly see that Putin and his cronies are dwelling
in a whole different part of the Milky Way galaxy, it looks reassuring.
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It helps us realize what’s the core and what’s the add-on.
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The add-on, or even the malignant growth,
includes the likes of Solovyov and Khinshtein helmed by Putin.
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But the Russian people are the real core.
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These people couldn’t care less about
the Oreshnik missiles or showdowns with NATO.
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Contrary to the official narrative, they don’t “crave action.”
Instead, these people are preoccupied with entirely different issues.
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Even though they may not be exactly anti-war,
like, for instance, those Sudzha online community members,
it doesn’t mean they’re pro-government.
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In their book, both the Ukrainian troops
and Putin can be seen as adversaries.
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It’s important that we find the right words for these fellow Russians.
We may hold different views, but we are in the same boat.
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The riders on that boat and the clingy invertebrates
that have infested it have different interests.
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The riders want to know where they’re headed,
why their fellow riders go missing, and why the boat is leaking.
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The boat isn’t sinking as the riders are scooping out the water.
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Many Russians have gron habituated to this scooping routine.
Some are using the buckets. Others are wielding their mugs.
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But they’re doing their utmost.
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They’re inundating the live Q&A editors with mobilization-related
questions, thus showing that this talkathon really stands for.
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Others are staging protest rallies once they sense
the government may shy away from dispersing them.
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People are mobilizing their efforts. And this isn’t
the kind of mobilization that sits right with the government.
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They take action whenever they feel it’s a safe
and perfectly legal thing to do.
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We aren’t talking admirable heroics
of which there are plenty, too.
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Most people take action whenever their joint efforts
don’t carry immediate government pushback.
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People were waiting in long lines
to sign up for Boris Nadezhdin’s presidential bid.
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They didn’t just leave their signatures but took
the bother to go through a ton of paperwork
to show their support for an anti-war candidate.
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That was an unforgettable experience compared
to the deserted Putin election campaign booths.
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In January, hundreds, if not thousands, of people teamed up to find
a cat kicked off the train by the train attendant in the dead of winter.
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The incident could’ve gone down as an act of unthinkable atrocity.
Instead, it came to symbolize people’s unity.
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A growing Telegram chat spawned countless volunteers
who were out to do the right thing and “fix” the grim reality.
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Journalist Ekaterina Vinokurova came up with an apt summary.
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“Twix the cat spurred a grassroots protest of a purely legal format.
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Braving the cold temperatures,
thousands joined the search party looking for a missing cat.
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Amid the overall powerlessness, if nothing else,
looking for that cat could bring about a happy ending to that story
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and see the light at the end of the otherwise dark tunnel.”
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The most recent manifestation of a grassroots protest
has been people’s joint action to mount a relief effort
in the aftermath of the Black Sea oil spill.
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Stopping the shelling
and people’s pointless deaths, facilitating family reunions,
and ending the war all have no readily available solutions.
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On the other hand, tackling an oil spill is simple.
The more oil you’ve bagged, the more efficient the relief effort.
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The same goes for the treatment of the oil-affected birds.
It somehow echoes the Twix tragedy.
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Taking action to save people is a crime, whereas saving animals isn’t.
People from all over Russia have stepped in to offer help.
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A small coterie of individuals is hurting our country
while scores of people are joining forces to mitigate
the ramifications of their harmful activities.
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It goes beyond the oil spill disaster. The harmers are jailing people,
while others are sending them letters of support.
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The harmers are embroiling entire citie into the war effort,
while others are helping the refugees.
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Let me say a few words about our Razmestim charity.
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It’s designed to help relocate those
who have found themselves in harm’s way in the war-torn areas.
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We’re bringing together the accommodation-seekers
with those willing to provide it for free, lots of people.
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We’ve already helped accommodate close to 150 families.
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Mind, those are the ones who’ve given us feedback,
a total of several hundred applicants.
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You can help this charity
by offering your accommodation options via a Telegram bot.
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Alternatively, you can donate so that we can pay
the call center operators who are going through the applications.
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If you need help getting accommodated, fell free to ask for that help.
Follow the links in the pinned comment.
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There are plenty of good Samaritans out there.
The accommodation offers even outnumber the applications.
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Just think about what these good Samaritans are capable
of doing once the relentless boat-salvaging mode is over
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and they can finally be productive
and start rebuilding in a peaceful Russia.
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That’s going to be the prosperous Russia of the future,
without the irony-laden quotes.
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But for now, let’s keep scooping this water out.
Let’s keep trying our hardest.
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See you tomorrow!