“Elon Musk sabotaged a Ukrainian attack on the russian fleet in Crimea by turning off Starlink.”
Comrade Musk is a vatnik. He has always been. The evidence was always there:
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2/ He literally sabotaged a Ukrainian military operation by disabling Starlink during an assault on the russian Black Sea fleet.
3/ He ordered Starlink service to be shut off during a key offensive near Kherson in September 2022. Over 100 communication devices went offline, crippling drone operations and battlefield coordination. Ukrainian forces were unable to encircle russian positions near Beryslav.
4/ Two sanctioned russian oligarchs reportedly helped him buy Twitter.
5/ His changes to Twitter massively amplified russian propaganda — by 2023, it was reaching more people than before the full-scale invasion.
6/ Musk and his father have consistently pushed Ukraine to surrender. His father even participated in the Kremlin-sponsored “Future Forum 2055” in Moscow.
7/ And now we know the full story of how Comrade Musk directly interfered with Ukraine’s battlefield operations.
8/ Right now, Ukraine relies on over 50,000 Starlink terminals. That’s a critical military asset — controlled by a man who’s openly aligned with russian interests.
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I just recently returned from Ukraine. Two things struck me deeply.
First, the mood is grim. You feel it in the air — in people’s eyes, in their silence. There is a constant anxiety about tomorrow.
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2/ Will there be another drone strike tonight? Will their family survive it? Air raid sirens are no longer background noise. They are very real. And terrifying.
3/ Second, there’s a growing sense of betrayal. Before, when I would say I’m American, people would thank the United States for supporting Ukraine. Now, they just shrug. The gratitude has faded — replaced by quiet disappointment. They feel abandoned. Betrayed.
Priests from the russian Orthodox Church blessing the russian rocket named “Satan”.
I’ve said it many times: the so-called russian Orthodox Church is not a church — it’s a sect. A state-run intelligence network masquerading as religion, directly controlled by the Kremlin.
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2/ Many russian priests hold both clerical and military ranks. For example, the head of the russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, is also a general of the FSB (formerly KGB). The EU Parliamentary Assembly officially named him an accomplice to Putin’s genocidal war.
3/ Unbelievably, this structure still legally operates in Ukraine. Russian priests have repeatedly been caught spreading propaganda, spying on Ukrainian forces, coordinating attacks, and storing ammunition in church buildings.
The so-called russian Orthodox Church is not a church — it’s a demonic sect. A state-run intelligence network masquerading as religion, directly controlled by the Kremlin.
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2/ Many russian priests hold both clerical and military ranks. For example, the head of the russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, is also a general of the FSB (formerly KGB).
3/ The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe officially named him an accomplice to Putin’s genocidal war. He openly calls for a “holy war” against Ukrainians.
A Letter to Donald Trump — from a bathtub in Kharkiv
Dear Donald
My name is Anna. I’m writing this from Ukraine — from Kharkiv — from the bathroom where I’m hiding with my dog from russian rockets and drones. There’s already been nine explosions in the city, by my count.
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2/ Before the shelling began, I was watching the news.
As I ran for cover, I didn’t turn off the TV.
Now I hear your voice echoing from the other room — announcing another delay in sanctions.
Usually, I refrain from criticizing the Ukrainian government during wartime. Our primary focus should be rallying international support for Ukraine.
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2/ I want to begin by saying that I support the appointment of Yuliia Svyrydenko as the new Prime Minister of Ukraine. Based on my personal interactions with Yuliia and her team, I believe she will do well as the Prime Minister.
3/ Nevertheless, I want to make two brief observations.
Russian casualties in Ukraine have reached staggering new levels.
Russia’s recent casualty rates are the highest since the invasion began. Independent estimates suggest that russian forces are losing 1,000–1,500 soldiers killed or wounded every single day.
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2/ Over two years into the full-scale invasion, total russian casualties — killed and wounded — may now exceed 1 million.
3/ Why so high?
• Russia continues large-scale offensives, throwing waves of infantry into attacks regardless of losses.