Ukraine and the consequences of Soviet propaganda

May 08, 2010 00:42

Today was the Friday before Victory Day. And, of course, they made a political TV-show. Oh, and to everyone who doesn't know "Ukraine's Communist Party unveiled on Wednesday a monument to Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin".  That's just insane! Seriously, I could imagine myself living in the same city with the murderer of over 30 million people. But ( Read more... )

english, достали, propaganda, ukraine, thoughts

Leave a comment

Comments 10

brandnewshulman May 7 2010, 23:41:16 UTC
Don't try to fit to the official meaning of Ukrainian; find out your own.

Post-empirical syndrome is something being cured through the centuries.

It's quite wise to write not-so-patriotic posts in English.

Mixing of blood... Nazis.

Reply

martin3d3n May 8 2010, 18:28:45 UTC
This is patriotic. Because I honestly want my country to become a better place. European patriotism, not Soviet patriotism.
I'm not trying to fit anything.I know I am Ukrainian because I am a citizen, and because the government spends money on me. However, Ukraine's policy concerning this question really worries and irritates me.

Reply

brandnewshulman May 8 2010, 18:30:15 UTC
Well, as you might guess, I used the word "patriotic" in its Soviet pop sense.

Reply

martin3d3n May 8 2010, 18:35:31 UTC
Nah, we have freedom of speech)

Reply


(The comment has been removed)

martin3d3n May 8 2010, 18:34:14 UTC
Я бы с удовольствием забил на Сталина и жил бы исключительно в любви. К сожалению, сталинисты о Джугашвили помнят и что-то вякают. Я к Иосифу Виссарионовичу испытываю глубочайшую неприязнь(может, даже ненависть), чем ко всем другим вождям вместе взятым. Простой факт: если бы он умер на полгода позже, жили бы все евреи в Биробиджане. Он убивал людей не только физически, но и духовно. 25 лет страна жила, как в тюрьме- и такое не прощается.
А по фиг тем, кто ничего не знает.

Надеюсь, что нет. Но мы к этому идем.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up