Gringo180 wrote: » Any facts involved here or is it just your blatant bias against anything Russian taking over? Vote at gunpoint? Is this some sort of wind up?
Gatling wrote: » I'm sure the 750 russians surveyed would say no , If russia was actually punished severely kicked out of the swift banking system for a start it might be possible , But might be a better idea starting in Georgia and then going back to Crimea
XsApollo wrote: » Of all the leaders in the world right now, if I had to pick one. Vlad would be number one
[Deleted User] wrote: » Actually it was 750 respondents, of which 63% declared their nationality as Russian, 21% as Ukrainian and 8.5% as Tatar. Whats that about you and facts?
PopePalpatine wrote: » Any particular reason, besides the trite "he don't afraid of the big bad USA!" stuff?
Gatling wrote: » Stopped reading at 750 unfortunately it added nothing
XsApollo wrote: »
[Deleted User] wrote: » To what? Your own narrative? You don't read stuff you don't agree with?
Gatling wrote: » I read a lot but when you get a supposedly independent poll carried by a Moscow based center you be be sure it will only ever have a prorussian favor unfortunately
Gatling wrote: » I read a lot but when you get a supposedly independent poll carried by a Moscow based center you be be sure it will only ever have a prorussian favor unfortunately, Pay raises were promised , massive tourism influx , freedoms none of which has materialised but according to the UN rights are been abused lands , properties and businesses sized by russians so the whole idea Crimea is a happy Russoeutpoia is bs . Time will eventually tell the truth unlike Putin and his cronies
conditioned games wrote: » What makes you think Tatars are being persecuted. A link to a euronews site saying officials were denied access to Crimea back in 2014 doesn't support your theory. Would you rather the people of Crimea had to fight for their freedom from Ukraine rather than a peaceful vote?
Jimmy Garlic wrote: » I am going to Russia again in the Summer. Want to tag along? We can go to Crimea
prinzeugen wrote: » Where is next?
humanji wrote: » Man, what a loveable rogue.
conditioned games wrote: » Robin these are your views so far. Denied US involvement in the Ukrainian coup when even Obama said "Washington had brokered a deal to transition power" while US assistant secretary Victoria Nuland openly said, the US invested $5 billion in Ukraine since 1991 and the IMF gave a loan of $17 billion in 2014 most of which has been spent on military in the Ukrainian civil war. Given the above and your obnoxious attitude of know it all because you holidayed in Ukraine, it really is hard to take you seriously.
Elmer Blooker wrote: » Can you chupacabra or your Estonian friends give me a single solitary reason why Putin would want to invade the Baltic States? (an invasion has been "imminent" for three years now!) Anyone who falls for this "Putin-wants-to-restore-the-Soviet-empire" fairytale should really try and think for themselves and not fall for this 1950s mindless propaganda. If that's being "pro-Putin" then that's too bad!
XsApollo wrote: » Russia will never invade the Baltic states as they are now.
XsApollo wrote: » Putin isn't that stupid.
ambro25 wrote: » "Russia" didn't invade Georgia, Crimea or Eastern Ukraine, I don't think. South Ossetians, Abkhazians and Spetsnaz "Pro-Russian separatists", more like He's anything but, on that we're well agreed.
XsApollo wrote: » Georgia , Crimea , Ukraine arnt in the same situation as Lithuania , Estonia , Latvia. You can surely see the difference yes?
robindch wrote: » The difference is that the three Baltic states are bound by the terms of a mutual self-defence treaty, while the first three aren't. Putin might be a conniving, malignant, war-mongering sh*t, but he doesn't yet know that Europe (and perhaps the US) won't come to the aid of their military allies. And, as we all agree, he's good at playing people, organizations and countries for short-term aims. I'm sure the pro-Putin side has a range of other unhinged and improbable explanations for the same - probably involving social decline in the EU/US caused by the general lack of the Orthodox Church, all those gheys, and of course, Conchita Wurst.
Gatling wrote: » The majority of Crimea voted to rejoin russia the whole 120%+ of the population yeah right ,they only made up a 58% of the population but yet 120% said they voted to rejoin russia ,you forget the part where Vladi himself publicly stated he decided to take Crimea back when the protests stated ,read the memos
Deleted User wrote: » Speaking of Eurovision singers, any chance Ukraine will stop acting childishly and let Julia Samoilova sing in the competition in Ukraine?