Thread: Stupid Shit in Kyiv
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03-24-24 15:13 #2495
Posts: 324Originally Posted by Argo1990 [View Original Post]
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03-24-24 14:53 #2494
Posts: 110People are way too prone to get into a virtual political dick comparison contest here man. Can we get back to the actually important topic which is cheap Ukrainian pussy?
I went in 2017. Back then you could have some hot and young semi pros (really gorgeous students) for 1500-2000 for an hour but you had to search around quite a bit, it was very very inconvenient for a short trip.
Escort sites and full on hookers in some of the bigger clubs were more expensive and not as yummy.
How is the landscape in 2024?
Yes war and all but idgaf, I want cheap slavic pussy and coming from Germany (yes we have tons here but the quality is atrocious and its 50 euro for 15 min with no kissing, DATY, BBBJ, etc.) With extras and enough time you end up paying 200 euros nowadays for a hot girl and even then they tend to rush you alot and service is just not great.
So I am looking to Eastern Europe for a short 4-5 day trip before I do the big leap in May to Central / South America.
So to get back to original question. Still plenty of pussy in the 2000 UAH price range? And how best to find them?
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02-20-24 06:49 #2493
Posts: 1956People listening to Russian propaganda are fucking morons anyway.
Originally Posted by EnterTheV [View Original Post]
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02-19-24 22:32 #2492
Posts: 3224Originally Posted by EnterTheV [View Original Post]
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02-19-24 14:00 #2491
Posts: 156Originally Posted by Paulie97 [View Original Post]
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02-18-24 21:34 #2490
Posts: 1680Yep
Originally Posted by Xpartan [View Original Post]
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02-17-24 20:59 #2489
Posts: 1956So you did lie!
Originally Posted by Elvis2008 [View Original Post]
Well, that's an admission Elvis. No better way to say yes I lied, but here is an article you might find useful.
Thank you, thank you very much!
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02-17-24 20:53 #2488
Posts: 324Originally Posted by Elvis2008 [View Original Post]
The point you have repeatedly chosen to ignore, is that Putin can leave Ukraine at any time he wishes, but does not. If he did that, the war would immediately end and talks could take place for some kind of settlement.
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02-17-24 20:51 #2487
Posts: 1956Not so.
Originally Posted by VinDici [View Original Post]
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02-17-24 19:23 #2486
Posts: 3224Originally Posted by DramaFree11 [View Original Post]
I went back and looked at the whole biolabs in Ukraine thing here: https://greenwald.substack.com/p/vic...has-biological.
The Russian Foreign Ministry asserted that "Russia obtained documents proving that Ukrainian biological laboratories located near Russian borders worked on development of components of biological weapons. ".
Basically, Mario Rubio, a Republican, asked about bioweapons in Ukraine, and he expected "fuck the EU" Victoria Nuland to say there were not any. Instead she said that the USA was funding biolabs in Ukraine but they were research facilities.
You know one of the funny things about bureaucrats in our government is how little respect they have for foreign lives. It took the Australian press to uncover a video clip where Fauci said you do not put biological research facilities in Hoboken, NJ. You put them in China. That whole gain of function denial is semantics. That is exactly what he was talking about.
I guess I wonder why the Democrats and intelligence agencies who control them care so much about Ukraine. They do not give a fuck about the Ukrainians at all. That was a joke. And Zelensky got rid of Democracy there so the "fight for Democracy line" is done. The Russians taking over Europe and Putin as Hitler is as off now as it ever has was. Every time the military industrial conflict wants war they go back to the domino theory.
Obama said if Russia invaded Ukraine we would not help Ukraine as we had no vital interests there. Well, what changed? It makes you wonder right. Tucker Carlson wondered too. Well, I think this may be the one country on earth that is so corrupt that USA intelligence agencies and bureaucrats can do whatever they want.
When Biden got that AG fired, I think his name was Shokin who was looking into Burisma, he showed all of Ukraine who was running things and it was not Ukrainian politicians. That country has been run by Democrats and American bureaucrats and NGOs, and that probably is why Putin had to invade. I do not buy at all the blanket denials on biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons. Not at all.
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02-17-24 17:17 #2485
Posts: 3224Originally Posted by VinDici [View Original Post]
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02-17-24 17:15 #2484
Posts: 3224Originally Posted by Xpartan [View Original Post]
Guess the source on this, dummy:
After Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Western nations imposed the most extensive sanctions and trade restrictions in history on Moscow. Today, Russia appears to be doing OK.
Its economy is growing steadily. Russia can't buy much from the West but has found new providers for drones, surveillance gear, computer chips and other gear. Its oil and gas sales are still strong, despite attempts to stop them. Russian officials say they have plenty of money to pay for their war.
Moscow's continued strength is a humbling result for the USA And its allies. These nations make up more than half of the global economy, and they tried to weaponize their influence over trade and finance to weaken Russia. They hoped to make President Vladimir Putin a pariah and maybe even stop the war. Today, I'll explain why those efforts have fallen short and whether they can be made to work again.
The measures against Russia go far beyond traditional sanctions, which historically have targeted banks and elites. Those rules limit how much tech Russia can import, and they direct shipping companies and insurers to cap the price of Russia's oil at $60 per barrel well below market rate.
He sanctions took a toll. They raised the cost of many items for Russian civilians and forced the military to buy shoddier missiles and semiconductors. For Russian energy companies like Gazprom and Rosneft, exports to the West have plunged. But the Russian economy has proved surprisingly adaptable, thanks partly to its relationship with China.
It may seem surprising that Russia could so quickly replace so much of its trade with the USA, Japan and the E. You. But the rest of the global economy especially China's is large enough that the shift didn't take long. China already makes much of what Russia needs and can buy much of what it sells. Trade between China and Russia hit a record high last year as Russians turned to Chinese cars, electronics and weapons components. "China has to a large extent blunted the pain," said Eswar Prasad, a trade economist at Cornell University.
Another change has been the rise of a network of shipping companies, insurers and oil traders that does not answer to Western rules. This network, based in countries like China, India and the United Arab Emirates, has expanded since the war began to provide new channels for Russian oil. Thanks to this shadow fleet, Russia can get around the Western price cap on its oil by using shipping companies that don't comply with it. And Russians are still getting TVs, chips and cellphones through traders in Central Asia and the Middle East who buy them from the West and sell them at a markup.
The West chose not to put in place some tough measures, such as a full oil embargo, for fear they could disrupt the global economy. Unlike some nations the USA Has penalized before think of Cuba, Iran and Venezuela Russia is better integrated into world trade. It exports commodities other countries need, such as steel and fertilizer. And it still provides much of Europe's energy. Pain aimed at Russia would be felt well beyond its borders.
Finally, the newest sanctions the ones that try to constrain Russia's access to technology and its oil sales have not been as effective. The USA Wields much less influence over these sectors than it does over the banking sector, which is tethered to the dollar. The new measures, imposed in 2022, made it harder and more expensive for Russia to do business abroad. But they haven't wounded its economy enough to make most Russians question the war. "The mood in Russia is, the whole world is against us, but we are managing quite well," said Maria Snegovaya, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
USA Officials acknowledge all this. Still, they say they imposed costs that other nations will have to weigh before violating international law. Officials call that a win, even if the measures didn't send Russia into a recession or end the war.
Putin sees it differently. "The instruments and the policies of the United States are ineffective," Putin bragged during his interview last week with Tucker Carlson, according to a Russian government translator.
He is surely not the only leader to notice the USA Failure to cripple Russia. When China wants to menace Taiwan or India wants to assassinate perceived enemies on foreign soil, they will know that Washington couldn't turn Russia into a pariah when it broke the rules. In that way, sanctions in Russia have exposed the limits of USA Power.
QAnon? Epoch Times? Zero Hedge? He he.
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02-17-24 13:30 #2483
Posts: 156Originally Posted by VinDici [View Original Post]
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02-17-24 11:27 #2482
Posts: 324Originally Posted by Elvis2008 [View Original Post]
Originally Posted by Elvis2008 [View Original Post]
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02-17-24 11:24 #2481
Posts: 324Originally Posted by DramaFree11 [View Original Post]