🔥137👍35👏20🫡6❤5🥱2🤬1🤡1
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
“Denmark plans to return all 16 combat aircraft that were transferred to Ukraine at the end of November 2024.
This was announced by the Minister of Defence, Eifors Vars, who also mentioned that they will be stationed in Greenland.
This is related to a tense situation surrounding the island [of Greenland.]”
Zrada? — Zrada!
PS. The transcript provided by us (Slavyangrad) is a direct translation of the broadcast.
@Slavyangrad
This was announced by the Minister of Defence, Eifors Vars, who also mentioned that they will be stationed in Greenland.
This is related to a tense situation surrounding the island [of Greenland.]”
Zrada? — Zrada!
PS. The transcript provided by us (Slavyangrad) is a direct translation of the broadcast.
@Slavyangrad
🤣436😁47🤡40❤15🤷♂13👍8🤪5🤔2😱1🤬1🥱1
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
“Sold and/or destroyed...
Elensky: "Planes? What planes? Gimme moneys!"”
(c) Footnote Reader
Elensky: "Planes? What planes? Gimme moneys!"”
(c) Footnote Reader
🤣314😁38❤7🤬3💩3🔥2🤔1🥱1
🇺🇸⚔️🇩🇰War is imminent: The US has started secretly gathering confidential information about military facilities, ports, and air bases in Greenland, — Berlingske
▪️The Danish military discovered that the US was secretly collecting confidential information about military facilities without informing Copenhagen about it.
▪️The Danish authorities regarded this move as alarming, fearing that it might be related to US plans for pressure or even military action against Greenland.
▪️The Danish government and military leadership were immediately informed about this.
@Slavyangrad
▪️The Danish military discovered that the US was secretly collecting confidential information about military facilities without informing Copenhagen about it.
▪️The Danish authorities regarded this move as alarming, fearing that it might be related to US plans for pressure or even military action against Greenland.
▪️The Danish government and military leadership were immediately informed about this.
@Slavyangrad
🤣303😁94❤26🤬17🔥10🥱8💩6🤮5👏3❤🔥1😱1
Let’s be honest: US will have Greenland before the midterm elections.
Whatcha gonna do when they come for you?
Eh, bad boys?
You’ve made your bed, now take the rough lovemaking therein.
Whatcha gonna do when they come for you?
Eh, bad boys?
You’ve made your bed, now take the rough lovemaking therein.
😁205🤣124🤮36👍16🐳12🤔10🖕9❤7🤬3🥰2🤡2
As the SDF falls, we remember:
Ji çiyan pê ve tu heval nînin.
ھیچ دۆستێک جگە لە چیاکان
The Kurds “have no friends but the mountains.”
When will you learn?
“The saying was widely referenced following the withdrawal of US troops stationed in north-eastern Syria and the subsequent Turkish offensive into the region. Invoking the proverb, British YPG volunteer Azad Cudi said that: "The United States, like any other state or any other government, will do whatever serves their own best interests." He also said that despite a lack of allies or equipment to repel the offensive, the SDF would "fight back at all costs". The phrase has also been used to reflect on previous feelings of betrayal by the United States, specifically the Reagan administration's tolerance of the Anfal campaign against Iraqi Kurds in 1988 and the Trump administration's non-recognition of the Kurdistan Region independence referendum in 2017.” (c) (unfortunately) PediWikia
h/t @ZornKrieger
PS. Had you worked with Assad, things might have been different. Alas.
@Slavyangrad
Ji çiyan pê ve tu heval nînin.
ھیچ دۆستێک جگە لە چیاکان
The Kurds “have no friends but the mountains.”
When will you learn?
“The saying was widely referenced following the withdrawal of US troops stationed in north-eastern Syria and the subsequent Turkish offensive into the region. Invoking the proverb, British YPG volunteer Azad Cudi said that: "The United States, like any other state or any other government, will do whatever serves their own best interests." He also said that despite a lack of allies or equipment to repel the offensive, the SDF would "fight back at all costs". The phrase has also been used to reflect on previous feelings of betrayal by the United States, specifically the Reagan administration's tolerance of the Anfal campaign against Iraqi Kurds in 1988 and the Trump administration's non-recognition of the Kurdistan Region independence referendum in 2017.” (c) (unfortunately) PediWikia
h/t @ZornKrieger
PS. Had you worked with Assad, things might have been different. Alas.
@Slavyangrad
💯306👍34🤷♀19❤18😁9🤡5🥱4🌭3👎2🤬2👻1
🇷🇺🇸🇪 Nun spies: In Sweden, nuns from Belarus were suspected of having ties with the GRU, - The Telegraph
- In 2025, the Swedish Church officially recommended parishes to stop cooperating with the monastery, suspecting its ties with Russian special services.
- Nuns from the Minsk Saint Elisabeth Monastery, known for its pro-Russian stance, were previously expelled from Poland, allegedly for praying for the "heroes of the Special Military Operation"; selling souvenirs with Orthodox symbols, and sending part of the proceeds to support the Special Military Operation.
- A new round of scandal was caused by their public participation in a Christmas event in the suburbs of Stockholm, despite previous warnings. Photos with the Russian flag, Z symbols, and statements from a priest calling the monastery a "combat unit" appeared online.
@Slavyangrad
- In 2025, the Swedish Church officially recommended parishes to stop cooperating with the monastery, suspecting its ties with Russian special services.
- Nuns from the Minsk Saint Elisabeth Monastery, known for its pro-Russian stance, were previously expelled from Poland, allegedly for praying for the "heroes of the Special Military Operation"; selling souvenirs with Orthodox symbols, and sending part of the proceeds to support the Special Military Operation.
- A new round of scandal was caused by their public participation in a Christmas event in the suburbs of Stockholm, despite previous warnings. Photos with the Russian flag, Z symbols, and statements from a priest calling the monastery a "combat unit" appeared online.
@Slavyangrad
🤣311🤡54🙏48❤28🤪16🥴11🖕9🤨5👏3🔥2😢1
Where we currently are, my friends, brothers and sisters, and where we are going… and even that is not the end.
Take care of yourselves, so you can take of others when time comes.
Take care of yourselves, so you can take of others when time comes.
❤103🙏56😁8🤡6👀3🤬2🍾2🎃2🦄2👍1💩1
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
It wasn't worth it...
- The Wrong Side
@Slavyangrad
Please open Telegram to view this post
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
😱187🤡87😢53😁32🤷♂24🎉17⚡13🕊13❤12🥴7🤔3
“Con todos, y para el bien de todos.”
Glory to the sons of Cuba who stood their ground. True Communists to the end, you did what your people sent you to do. Ernesto’s Brigade, in life and in death.
“Cubanos:
Para Cuba que sufre, la primera palabra. De altar se ha de tomar a Cuba, para ofrendarle nuestra vida, y no cíe pedestal, para levantarnos sobre ella. Y ahora, después de evocado su amadísimo nombre, derramaré la ternura de mi alma sobre estas manos generosas que ¡no a deshora por cierto! acuden a dármele fuerzas para la agonía de la edificación…”
1891, José Marti
Glory to the sons of Cuba who stood their ground. True Communists to the end, you did what your people sent you to do. Ernesto’s Brigade, in life and in death.
“Cubanos:
Para Cuba que sufre, la primera palabra. De altar se ha de tomar a Cuba, para ofrendarle nuestra vida, y no cíe pedestal, para levantarnos sobre ella. Y ahora, después de evocado su amadísimo nombre, derramaré la ternura de mi alma sobre estas manos generosas que ¡no a deshora por cierto! acuden a dármele fuerzas para la agonía de la edificación…”
1891, José Marti
🫡283❤🔥72❤29👍29🙏19😢12🤡9😱3🤬2👻1🦄1
‼️🇺🇦💡 Now Kiev is without electricity for 16 hours: these are the longest power outages in Ukraine, — Yasno
▪️Due to the shelling of energy infrastructure, it's hard to say whether things will improve, — said the CEO of the energy company Yasno.
▪️Ukraine is switching to a regime of 4.5-5 power outages. In such conditions, there will be no electricity for more than 16 hours. This is the current reality, — added S. Kovalenko
▪️We're not talking about emergency outages, but specifically about schedules.
▪️Kiev is currently in a regime of emergency outages: approximately 3 hours with electricity and 10 hours without. But the situation differs from district to district.
@Slavyangrad
▪️Due to the shelling of energy infrastructure, it's hard to say whether things will improve, — said the CEO of the energy company Yasno.
▪️Ukraine is switching to a regime of 4.5-5 power outages. In such conditions, there will be no electricity for more than 16 hours. This is the current reality, — added S. Kovalenko
▪️We're not talking about emergency outages, but specifically about schedules.
▪️Kiev is currently in a regime of emergency outages: approximately 3 hours with electricity and 10 hours without. But the situation differs from district to district.
@Slavyangrad
🍾142⚡68☃30❤18😁6✍5👌5🤬4🥰1👏1👻1
What we lost.
(Post by Bella Rapoport — link to original)
Yesterday, I met up with my classmates from the college where I studied from 1997 to 1999. We hadn't seen each other in 27 years.
How our lives have turned out!
For example, an “I.,” fromSalekhard Kandalaksha (ed. —
revealed by author/source), had enrolled in an art university, but, at that very moment, universities became fee-paying (remarkably, the fees were in dollars, and the prices for everything else were also in dollars, and the prices changed every day: oh, how I remember Ella Rossman writing on Facebook that my article about sanctions as a colonial practice was incorrect, because Russia was never a colony of the United States!), and “I.'s” mother sent a hundred dollars to him in St. Petersburg all that time, but that was the maximum she could squeeze out of herself—the $250 tuition fee was unaffordable for a guy from the province (and this even without accounting for the fact that the northern cities [in Russia] had stopped receiving [subsidized] food and other supplies after the collapse of the USSR, and everything had become very expensive).
“I.,” who had attended an art school since childhood and received top marks, felt that he was finally following his destiny when he entered university and was looking forward to a certain path in life, but he was forced to return to fromSalekhard Kandalaksha (ed. —
revealed by author/source), where he has since been working as a painter for the Russian Railways, for the past 26 years, which is, of course, an important and necessary profession, and I have no intention of pitying “I.” from above, but this work is dangerous (people in work gloves at a temperature of minus 35 apply paint that does not adhere in the cold and breathe in chemical vapours) and low-paid, and the man had to say goodbye to his dream, which he is reminded of every time he visits St. Petersburg, which is several times a year.
These sudden changes, the abrupt shutdown of social mobility, hit my generation, which began life in the Soviet Union, very hard: alcohol and heroin killed many before they even turned 18. Our parents were deprived of their jobs, and we were deprived of our dreams and our future.
Even at the cultural level, instead of the heroic “Elusive Avengers” and the idealistic, promising young cosmonauts from “Moscow-Cassiopeia”, we were fed cartoons about “mice protecting banks.”
And for all this, we were asked, and, more importantly, are still being asked to be grateful, because we were "liberated" from totalitarianism and given the opportunity to be who we want to be (oh really?).
The representatives of the elite, who, guided by American manuals and ALREADY HAVING TAKEN EVERYTHING, decided to grab even more for themselves and, on the flip side, deprive us of access to even the remnants of opportunities, in order to create their own closed club with elite education for their children and trips to Courchevel, while doing so managed to convince us that this was for our own good, because life under capitalism, as opposed to under the “terrible communism,” is a blessing in itself.
Or maybe free universities were better after all?
I am so incredibly angry.
(c) Bella Rapoport
@Slavyangrad
(Post by Bella Rapoport — link to original)
Yesterday, I met up with my classmates from the college where I studied from 1997 to 1999. We hadn't seen each other in 27 years.
How our lives have turned out!
For example, an “I.,” from
revealed by author/source), had enrolled in an art university, but, at that very moment, universities became fee-paying (remarkably, the fees were in dollars, and the prices for everything else were also in dollars, and the prices changed every day: oh, how I remember Ella Rossman writing on Facebook that my article about sanctions as a colonial practice was incorrect, because Russia was never a colony of the United States!), and “I.'s” mother sent a hundred dollars to him in St. Petersburg all that time, but that was the maximum she could squeeze out of herself—the $250 tuition fee was unaffordable for a guy from the province (and this even without accounting for the fact that the northern cities [in Russia] had stopped receiving [subsidized] food and other supplies after the collapse of the USSR, and everything had become very expensive).
“I.,” who had attended an art school since childhood and received top marks, felt that he was finally following his destiny when he entered university and was looking forward to a certain path in life, but he was forced to return to from
revealed by author/source), where he has since been working as a painter for the Russian Railways, for the past 26 years, which is, of course, an important and necessary profession, and I have no intention of pitying “I.” from above, but this work is dangerous (people in work gloves at a temperature of minus 35 apply paint that does not adhere in the cold and breathe in chemical vapours) and low-paid, and the man had to say goodbye to his dream, which he is reminded of every time he visits St. Petersburg, which is several times a year.
These sudden changes, the abrupt shutdown of social mobility, hit my generation, which began life in the Soviet Union, very hard: alcohol and heroin killed many before they even turned 18. Our parents were deprived of their jobs, and we were deprived of our dreams and our future.
Even at the cultural level, instead of the heroic “Elusive Avengers” and the idealistic, promising young cosmonauts from “Moscow-Cassiopeia”, we were fed cartoons about “mice protecting banks.”
And for all this, we were asked, and, more importantly, are still being asked to be grateful, because we were "liberated" from totalitarianism and given the opportunity to be who we want to be (oh really?).
The representatives of the elite, who, guided by American manuals and ALREADY HAVING TAKEN EVERYTHING, decided to grab even more for themselves and, on the flip side, deprive us of access to even the remnants of opportunities, in order to create their own closed club with elite education for their children and trips to Courchevel, while doing so managed to convince us that this was for our own good, because life under capitalism, as opposed to under the “terrible communism,” is a blessing in itself.
Or maybe free universities were better after all?
I am so incredibly angry.
(c) Bella Rapoport
@Slavyangrad
🙏152❤78💯57😢13👍7😴7✍4❤🔥3🤬2🫡2🏆1
🇺🇸⚔️🇪🇺The EU strikes back against the US
▪️The European Union is developing retaliatory tariff measures worth €93 billion (over 8 trillion rubles) against the US. This is Brussels' response to Trump's harsh statements about the deployment of European troops in Greenland and NATO funding.
▪️ Brussels is also considering restricting American companies' access to the European market if the pressure from Washington continues.
▪️What is happening is the most serious crisis in transatlantic relations in recent decades. The situation has sharply escalated after Trump imposed tariffs against EU countries that have deployed military contingents in Greenland, calling this a "threat to peace".
▪️German Chancellor Merz previously warned that tariff threats from the US undermine the alliance and carry a real risk of escalation in relations between allies.
@Slavyangrad
▪️The European Union is developing retaliatory tariff measures worth €93 billion (over 8 trillion rubles) against the US. This is Brussels' response to Trump's harsh statements about the deployment of European troops in Greenland and NATO funding.
▪️ Brussels is also considering restricting American companies' access to the European market if the pressure from Washington continues.
▪️What is happening is the most serious crisis in transatlantic relations in recent decades. The situation has sharply escalated after Trump imposed tariffs against EU countries that have deployed military contingents in Greenland, calling this a "threat to peace".
▪️German Chancellor Merz previously warned that tariff threats from the US undermine the alliance and carry a real risk of escalation in relations between allies.
@Slavyangrad
🤡199👏69😁53🤣43❤11🥱10🤷♀9🤔3🥰2🤬1🤮1
Slavyangrad | No Pissdill
What we lost. (Post by Bella Rapoport — link to original) Yesterday, I met up with my classmates from the college where I studied from 1997 to 1999. We hadn't seen each other in 27 years. How our lives have turned out! For example, an “I.,” from Salekhard…
Just so you understand: Drugs flooded the former USSR after the breakup, NO DOUBT at the behest of the “beacon of Western capitalism,” the US, and the urging of its Board of Directors at the CIA.
I don’t have personal stories to share, but nearly everyone I know from those times does. Young people died en masse from overdoses and chronic use. Summa cum laude or not, the depression that hit took a pound of flesh from the body of Russian people (and all those who shared the Soviet land).
Opium Wars 2.0—nearly identical to what the British did to China. (No wonder that the US considered Afghanistan a strategic asset in the Cold War).
Here is another post, adding to the one by Bella Rapoport, this one from Maria Baronova (a former pro-Western liberal who regained her senses and sanity and is now a vocal advocate for Russia and her sovereignty):
———
Here in my chat, apologists for “holy capitalism” responded to our arguments that in the USSR there were free trips to holiday homes and sanatoriums at least once a year, as well as mandatory trips to youth (pioneer) camps, and now (and for the last 30 years) we have nothing like that and there are no plans to introduce it, by saying: Well, the USSR could afford it with non-market methods!
Oh, those terrible non-market methods!
In essence, everything was taken away from the people: from the right to housing to the right to guaranteed trips to vacation destinations. Not to mention social mobility. Now the elite is cemented in place, by God. Those who managed to get into the nomenclature by the end of the 1980s made it. Everyone else "just didn't try hard enough."
But we are still being asked to pretend that all this is very right. After all, communism is terrible, and capitalism is so great!
So, it turns out that with the help of non-market methods, you can afford a lot, right?
I don’t have personal stories to share, but nearly everyone I know from those times does. Young people died en masse from overdoses and chronic use. Summa cum laude or not, the depression that hit took a pound of flesh from the body of Russian people (and all those who shared the Soviet land).
Opium Wars 2.0—nearly identical to what the British did to China. (No wonder that the US considered Afghanistan a strategic asset in the Cold War).
Here is another post, adding to the one by Bella Rapoport, this one from Maria Baronova (a former pro-Western liberal who regained her senses and sanity and is now a vocal advocate for Russia and her sovereignty):
———
Here in my chat, apologists for “holy capitalism” responded to our arguments that in the USSR there were free trips to holiday homes and sanatoriums at least once a year, as well as mandatory trips to youth (pioneer) camps, and now (and for the last 30 years) we have nothing like that and there are no plans to introduce it, by saying: Well, the USSR could afford it with non-market methods!
Oh, those terrible non-market methods!
In essence, everything was taken away from the people: from the right to housing to the right to guaranteed trips to vacation destinations. Not to mention social mobility. Now the elite is cemented in place, by God. Those who managed to get into the nomenclature by the end of the 1980s made it. Everyone else "just didn't try hard enough."
But we are still being asked to pretend that all this is very right. After all, communism is terrible, and capitalism is so great!
So, it turns out that with the help of non-market methods, you can afford a lot, right?
Telegram
Baronova
Тут в моем чяте, апологеты святого капитализма, на наши аргументы, что в СССР были бесплатные путевки в дома отдыха и санатории минимум раз в год, а также обязательные путевки в пионерлагеря, а сейчас (и последние 30 лет) у нас ничего такого нет и не планируется…
💯242❤29😢15🤬12😁4👌4👀3🥱2❤🔥1🤮1🥴1
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
‼️🇺🇦🏴☠️Returning deserters are sent to the assault, — Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine
▪️There are already not many people willing to join the Armed Forces of Ukraine, and after such revelations, the number has decreased even more.
➖"Those who return from the occupied territories are primarily sent to the frontline. The units that carry out tasks on the most active frontline sectors are replenished first. Unfortunately, there are losses and a need for personnel replenishment in areas where active combat operations are taking place," said Syrsky.
@Slavyangrad
▪️There are already not many people willing to join the Armed Forces of Ukraine, and after such revelations, the number has decreased even more.
➖"Those who return from the occupied territories are primarily sent to the frontline. The units that carry out tasks on the most active frontline sectors are replenished first. Unfortunately, there are losses and a need for personnel replenishment in areas where active combat operations are taking place," said Syrsky.
@Slavyangrad
😁119💩97🤡33🖕31🤬9😢7❤6🌭5🔥3🙏2👍1
"The Energy of Decommunization". Issue 1.
Infographics of electricity shortages in Ukraine by region as of January 18, 2026.
Key metrics:
• Average daily electricity availability - 11.3 hours (47%)
• The worst situation in the Poltava region - 28.1%
• The best situation in the Kyiv region - 80.6%
• Data completeness by region - 20 out of 21, by population - 91%
• Average weekly electricity availability - 11 hours (45.9%)
Methodology:
• Data from open sources of electricity outage graphs by region.
• The percentage by region indicates the average electricity supply time during the day.
• "Light bulb" - the average electricity supply time across Ukraine, taking into account the distribution of the population by region.
• Emergency outages and deviations from outage schedules are not taken into account.
• The population of regions for which there is no daily data does not affect the indicator on "Light bulb".
- Lost Armour
@Slavyangrad
"Communism is Soviet power plus the electrification of the entire country"
V.I. Lenin, 21.11.1920
Infographics of electricity shortages in Ukraine by region as of January 18, 2026.
Key metrics:
• Average daily electricity availability - 11.3 hours (47%)
• The worst situation in the Poltava region - 28.1%
• The best situation in the Kyiv region - 80.6%
• Data completeness by region - 20 out of 21, by population - 91%
• Average weekly electricity availability - 11 hours (45.9%)
Methodology:
• Data from open sources of electricity outage graphs by region.
• The percentage by region indicates the average electricity supply time during the day.
• "Light bulb" - the average electricity supply time across Ukraine, taking into account the distribution of the population by region.
• Emergency outages and deviations from outage schedules are not taken into account.
• The population of regions for which there is no daily data does not affect the indicator on "Light bulb".
- Lost Armour
@Slavyangrad
⚡125😁45❤25☃15👍3🤔2🙏2🥱2❤🔥1🤬1🤡1