She's British?C-Mag wrote:TheReal_ND wrote:
Well she should just go join the infantry so she can kill those Commie Bastards.
Fuck that whore
She's British?C-Mag wrote:TheReal_ND wrote:
Well she should just go join the infantry so she can kill those Commie Bastards.
You are severely underestimating the VVS!ssu wrote:As we aren't in NATO, we aren't, or basically our aerospace, isn't such a threat to Russia. We'll take our chances.
If survived alone Stalin, a Putin is easy.
Government watchdog Judicial Watch has found a number of new emails belonging to former Democrat presidential candidate Hillary Clinton containing classified information and showing favors being done for a Russia connected organization through the Clinton Foundation while she was Secretary of State.
I'm pretty sure she's not going to be toting around 240B and a Ruck as the Russian Hordes come over the hill.California wrote:She's British?C-Mag wrote:TheReal_ND wrote:
Well she should just go join the infantry so she can kill those Commie Bastards.
Fuck that whore
Ain't much of a horde these days; cross the English Channel, with only 12,000 Morskaya Pekhota? Good luck with that, them Russians would be hard pressed to take Odessa never mind Oxford.C-Mag wrote:I'm pretty sure she's not going to be toting around 240B and a Ruck as the Russian Hordes come over the hill.
PODOLSK, Russia — As a former Soviet factory director, Vladimir Melikhov survived the brutal business turf wars of the 1990s to make a fortune in construction. Now he devotes his energy and money to what, in the Russia of President Vladimir V. Putin, has become a truly risky enterprise: digging into Russian history.
Mr. Melikhov has founded a private museum that is devoted to the memory of the “anti-Bolshevik resistance” and that delves into a singularly taboo topic — why many Cossacks and other persecuted Soviet citizens welcomed, at least initially, Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941.
The museum, housed in a three-story building he built himself on his private estate in Podolsk, south of Moscow, makes no attempt to glorify Nazi collaborators. But it has enraged the authorities by focusing on the relentless persecution that followed Russia’s 1917 Bolshevik revolution, creating fertile ground for anti-Soviet treachery during a war that cost 25 million Soviet lives.
“What they really don’t like is that I make people think about what happened in the past and what is happening today,” Mr. Melikhov said.