Mobilized drunk Russians are going to Ukraine – both passengers and the driver are drinking: “What are we driving?” Don’t know where we’re all going”

Mobilized drunk Russians are going to Ukraine – both passengers and the driver are drinking: “What are we driving?” Don’t know where we’re all going”
Mobilized drunk Russians are going to Ukraine – both passengers and the driver are drinking: “What are we driving?” Don’t know where we’re all going”
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At that time, a parody of the Kremlin began in the occupied territories of Ukraine – pseudo-referendums on joining Russia.

The Russians are going to war in Ukraine. Drunkards:

“The second one fell asleep…”

“Pour it for me!” – Give the operator… – The operator! “Give it to the operator, guys!”

Both the passengers and the driver taking them to war drink. If you don’t run out of vodka, these mobilized Russians will have to be packed into sacks before they even reach the front: “You’ll take us back. – We’ll fill you up. “I’m in, guys.” Have a glass with you after the victory.”

This is a great reflection of the Russian mentality and Russian reality: “What are we driving for?” I don’t know where we are all going. “We all go where we need to…”

He doesn’t know what he’s driving or where he’s going… but he’s driving because it’s pouring. And transports: “One here, another here. Everything is fine. The bus…”

And when they get drunk, they start fighting before they even reach the front. Some are transported by buses. Others by train: “How many people accompany two wagons with mobilized…”

And in Yakutia, a local man is escorted to war even on his birthday: “Let’s congratulate Akiev Adzhan on his birthday. We are sending him to military service today.”

The Kremlin is obviously sending mostly men from the outskirts of Russia to the war. For example, the first cannon fodder buses from Dagestan:

“You are calling at night…” – Do not disturb. – How not to disturb? You knocked. Introduce yourself. You woke me up at night…”, – at night, calls are given to the Buryats in the apartment building.

“My friend is 15 years old. lives in Russia. Yesterday he finally got Russian citizenship. And yesterday they announced mobilization…”

“Already a stroke. We haven’t arrived yet, already a stroke…”

The American Institute for Military Research declares that the mobilization in Russia is clearly ethnically disproportionate. Putin first gets rid of those who live further from his golden palace and pose less of a threat to the regime.

“We know the real mood in the regions of Russia. We see that people in Dagestan, Buryatia, other republics and regions of Russia understand that they were simply abandoned. They sent him to die,” says Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Closer to the capital, it’s harder to lure cannon fodder. More threats and trickery are needed. In Moscow, summonses are handed out at the exit of the subway. There, the Russians express more claims and explain why they should not have shouted: “Please. I have never served, I was not conscripted, I have no military specialty.”

But it is already clear that Putin is sending Russians with no military experience to war. And, it is unlikely that he will prepare them decently. The first images from the test site in Sibirtseve, Primorsky Krai: “We don’t know where we are going. But we’re going.”

This is the Russian outpost near North Korea. Ukrainians are trying to explain to Russians why it is better not to go to Ukraine. Shows the wagons-freezers, with the bodies of the occupants.

“It’s 21 years old here. conscripts; older soldiers; the pilot who ejected but it didn’t help him; the man with two watches is probably a marauder. Move on guys, it’s your choice. That’s how it’s going to end.”

Volodymyr Zelensky officially offers a way out to the mobilized Russians. And promises to help.

“55 thousand Russians died in this war in half a year. Tens of thousands are injured and maimed. Want more? No? Then protest. Fight back. run away Or surrender to Ukrainian captivity. These are your survival options,” says V. Zelenskis.

And the Russians are running. Traffic jam now at the entrance to Kazakhstan. And Finland announces that while the borders are not yet closed to Russians, their flow is increasing. No more than three thousand Russians enter Finland per day, as before the mobilization, but 7 thousand. There are also huge traffic jams on the Russian-Sakartvel border. Russian border guards, it seems, have already received the order to release as few runaways as possible:

“It took 12 hours to cross the border. – Why so long? What’s the problem? – I don’t know. It seems that the Russian border guards were somehow slow to pass…”

The Kremlin continues to lie, as if the Russians are not running away from the war. And Moscow’s buildings in Crimea are trying to raise the morale of the occupiers.

“Laws apply to everyone. My son was drafted today. In the morning, he already left for the unit,” says Sergei Aksionov, a construction worker from Moscow in Crimea.

Maybe Aksionov’s son will have to fight, because Ukraine will definitely come to take Crimea. But certainly not for the sons of Putin’s friends like Lavrov, who spreads brazen lies.

“Ukraine finally became a totalitarian Nazi state. Where international humanitarian law is irresponsibly ignored,” says Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

Taking the opportunity to spread propaganda at the UN, Lavrov simply left the hall after his speech.

“He left the hall. And this is not surprising. I don’t think Lavrov wants to listen to this council’s condemnation,” says British UN representative James Cleverly.

“I noticed that Russian diplomats run almost as fast as Russian soldiers…”, says Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba.

The soldiers of the occupiers not only run, but also help film propaganda films: “Today is a real holiday for us, you could say…”

Moscow’s military-occupied Luhansk votes in a pseudo-referendum on joining Russia. Today, the Kremlin-directed voting spectacle begins in the occupied territories of Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhia. Kremlin officials will undoubtedly tell their commander Putin that they want to go to Russia. Especially in Donbass, where after 2014 only people who worship Putin remained to live.

And this year, people in the occupied lands in the south of Ukraine were not afraid to protest: “The land of Snigurivka has always belonged to Ukraine. There was and will be Ukraine. We never wanted to go to Russia and never will.”

Pseudo-voting in pseudo-referendums also takes place in Russia itself, where Putin-loving Ukrainians live. The pseudo-referendums will be held throughout the weekend and until Tuesday.


The article is in Lithuanian

Tags: Mobilized drunk Russians Ukraine passengers driver drinking driving Dont

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