1/10 russia has suffered significantly higher casualties in Ukraine than in both the Chechen wars and the Afghan war combined. How many more casualties will it take for the russian people to recognize the failure of this war? Data by @KilledInUkraine
2/10 russia's invasion of Ukraine has been highly unsuccessful from a military standpoint. Despite mobilizing forces and incurring substantial losses, russia has failed to capture a single regional capital or city with special status.
3/10 @KilledInUkraine reported that in Kamensk-Uralsky, there were 8 fatalities in Afghanistan, 9 during the first Chechen war, 14 in the second Chechen war, and 136 deaths in Ukraine.
4/10 @KilledInUkraine has also verified that 4,648 russian officers have died in Ukraine. It's important to note that not all losses are confirmed, and officers represent only a small fraction of the total casualties.
5/10 In July, Mediazona estimated that at least 120,000 Russians have died. This figure would imply that Russia has experienced around 500,000 total casualties.
6/10 Estimates of russian casualties vary, but it is likely that Russia has incurred between 500,000 and 700,000 total casualties in this unsuccessful war.
7/10 The war will not conclude through the occupation of territories. It will come to an end when the average russian, who tends to hold imperialistic views, recognizes that the war is too costly in terms of human lives and economic resources and that it cannot be won.
8/10 It may take years for the average russian to come to this realization due to the effectiveness of propaganda in russia. However, it is bound to happen eventually.
9/10 Putin overreached and compromised his country's potential by launching this unwarranted and failed invasion.
Musk used Trump to bulldoze institutions, dodge investigations, and push a far-right agenda.
Now that Trump is a liability, Musk is pretending he was never involved. Don’t fall for it!
2/7 The Trump-Musk fallout isn’t just drama—it’s the end of a strategy.
Musk used Trump as a Trojan horse to gut institutions, get access to data, and to dodge investigations. Now that Trump is no longer useful, he is discarding him and pretending it never happened
3/7 The Trump-Musk split is a power shift. Musk and Trump are now fighting openly, and while it was always bound to happen, it’s still beautiful to watch. These are two morally bankrupt, corrupt men who deserve each other—but no praise
For 3+ years, our leaders have waited for the war in Ukraine to solve itself—or for Trump and Putin to do it for them.
But waiting won’t end this war. Only action will.
Here’s what Europe must do—before it’s too late
2/5 Europe holds all the cards—but lacks courage and will. We have applied no real pressure on Putin. The way to speed up the end of the war? Commit to substantial, long-term military aid for Ukraine and impose tougher sanctions on russia. It’s that simple!
3/5 We need to impose sanctions on russia to the point where its economy truly feels the impact—more deeply and more quickly than it does now—combined with long-term military aid commitments that show Putin he cannot outlast the West
1/11 Trump was never the main threat—just the opening act and Trojan horse.
The technofascist oligarchs who backed him are already planning what comes next—and it’s darker, more authoritarian, more organized, and far more dangerous!
2/11 The most dangerous phase of Trumpism is just beginning—and it’s no longer about Trump. The technofascist oligarchs who helped him to power are already planning what comes next. What they want is far worse
3/11 The technofascist Yarvin-fan oligarchs are already starting to prepare for the post-Trump era, and that will be even more dangerous and go far beyond the current Trump administration. To them, Trump was just a Trojan horse.
Rearming Europe matters—but arming Ukraine must come first.
If Ukraine wins, russia can’t invade anyone else.
If Ukraine loses, the war spreads.
Here’s why helping Ukraine WIN should be our top priority:
2/6 Rearming Europe is important, but arming Ukraine is even more important—and it should be the top priority. A Ukrainian victory guarantees there won’t be a russian invasion of other European countries
3/6 If Europe wants to avoid fighting russia beyond Ukraine, we must prioritize helping Ukraine over rearming ourselves. Both are needed—but as long as russia doesn’t win in Ukraine, it can’t fight elsewhere
1/5 Europe needs to finally wake up! russia has no interest in peace. Trump won’t hold them accountable. Yet European leaders keep stalling while Ukraine suffers. Waiting won’t bring peace—only decisive action will!
2/5 It should be clear by now that russia doesn’t want peace, Trump won’t properly pressure them, and peace in Ukraine isn’t close—yet Europe still isn’t making serious moves. Time to wake up instead of just buying time!
3/5 European leaders wasted months discussing post-war peacekeepers in a war that shows no sign of ending—probably just to buy time. But buy time for what? Trump was elected almost seven months ago, and we are still buying time!
1/6 A strategic blow and humiliation for Putin and russia as whole: Ukraine’s successful strikes save lives and weaken russia’s ability to attack other countries in the future. As usual, russia will retaliate by targeting Ukrainian civilians
2/6 Nearly 3.5 years into russia’s failed 3-day war, Ukraine continues to humiliate Moscow—hitting at least 4 airbases and destroying strategic bombers with drones, all on camera. How humiliating!
3/6 russian strategic bombers play a key role in Moscow’s long-range strike capabilities, serving as platforms for cruise missile attacks and nuclear deterrence—and have been heavily used for strikes against Ukrainian civilians in the current war