Russia: Difference between revisions

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Russia is a KGB-run dictatorship[https://slib.pl/agnieszka-plonka-the-cold-war-has-never-ended-it-just-went-bankrupt-for-a-while/], expansionist colonial empire, and state sponsor of terrorism[https://www.brusselstimes.com/eu-affairs/326585/european-parliament-declares-russia-state-sponsor-of-terrorism][https://visitukraine.today/blog/1034/the-parliament-of-estonia-declared-russia-a-terrorist-regime-what-does-it-mean].  
russia is a KGB-run dictatorship[https://slib.pl/agnieszka-plonka-the-cold-war-has-never-ended-it-just-went-bankrupt-for-a-while/], expansionist colonial empire, and state sponsor of terrorism[https://www.brusselstimes.com/eu-affairs/326585/european-parliament-declares-russia-state-sponsor-of-terrorism][https://visitukraine.today/blog/1034/the-parliament-of-estonia-declared-russia-a-terrorist-regime-what-does-it-mean].  


It is the legal successor of the [[USSR]] and its ruling ideology is referred to as [[Kremlinism]]. Its supporters are referred to as [[vatnik]]s, [[tankies]], and [[Kremlintarians]]. Its victims are referred to as [[russophobes]].
It is the legal successor of the [[USSR]] and its ruling ideology is referred to as [[Kremlinism]]. Its supporters are referred to as [[vatnik]]s, [[tankies]], and [[Kremlintarians]]. Its victims are referred to as [[russophobes]].

Revision as of 07:09, 3 January 2023

russia is a KGB-run dictatorship[5], expansionist colonial empire, and state sponsor of terrorism[6][7].

It is the legal successor of the USSR and its ruling ideology is referred to as Kremlinism. Its supporters are referred to as vatniks, tankies, and Kremlintarians. Its victims are referred to as russophobes.

Its ruler is traditionnaly referred to as “czar” (from latin Caesar). The current czar is KGB lieutenant-colonel Vladmir Putin, possibly the richest man in the world through sheer corruption [8].

Continuity with USSR

worth it.

Corruption

Geography

Russia-one-picture.jpeg
Russia-one-picture-3.jpeg
сильная россия -- strong russia
Ru-one-picture-2.jpg

State symbols

The State Duma building in Moscow.Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg
russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Economy

Inequality

Slavery

Religion

LGBT rights


Culture


Prison culture

Military

respect for the military

washing machines

Racism

Travel visas for Russians

Tourism promotion

Gastronomy

Opposition to the Kremlinist regime

More