Mankurts always complain that they were deceived and were not paid as much blood money as they were promised. But they do not complain about the fact that they do not have enough brains not to go to the war for this money. Here, for example, is how a fresh prisoner from Bashkortostan behaves.
The Mankurts from Tyva boast about how they “liberated” part of Avdeevka for the Muscovites. They report to their employers to be paid money for the war. Unlike these Mankurts, the residents of Avdeevka spoke this language completely, flawlessly.
In 1989, a resolution of the Congress of People’s Deputies of the USSR condemned the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Putin canceled this resolution and ordered that the invasion be considered a righteous deed.
The trenches are under the control of Muscovites, but they do not take their dead people. Judging by the degree of decomposition in wintertime, the corpses lie there for several weeks. There is no movement in front in that place, so they are in control over the trenches. Muscovites walk over pieces of their fellows and live with their corpses in the trenches: eat, sleep and fight. When it rains or thaws, the slurry of the dead people spreads over the trenches, flooding the blindages.
True Muscovite necrophilia, which stretches from the depths of centuries and is embedded in the mentality to always repeat and repeat again surrounding themselves with many corpses. This is what they wanted to repeat. They wanted the indigenous peoples to lie there instead of them, and they would walk over our bodies, talking about great victories at our expense.
Recently, attacks on Russian oil depots have become commonplace: on January 25, at an oil refinery in Tuapse, the only one on the Black Sea coast of the Russian Federation, after two powerful explosions, a large-scale fire started, equipment for the primary processing of oil products, namely the vacuum and atmospheric columns, was damaged. The annual capacity of the Rosneft enterprise in Tuapse is 12 million tons; after a large fire, production stopped.
After all, the Russians have so few theaters – the Udmurts should share. Even if performances in this Theater for Young Spectators were mainly in Russian, it was still oppression of Russians that it was not called Russian. Reconstruction took 10 years, and parents waited 10 years for a new theater. It worked for a little less than two years, and now it is being absorbed by the Russian theater.