
Сало Печали
185 posts






I truly hope that these several thousand accounts spamming my comments for the last 24 hours with 'Lviv is Poland,' calling for the genocide of Ukrainians, and the 'pseudo-Ukrainians' supporting them, are actually Russian bots. There is a reason for hope: I know many Polish people personally and I see how strongly they support Ukraine. Furthermore, the Polish people themselves have exposed Russian bot farms and even provided evidence that Russia pays children to write Ukrainophobic comments. But shouldn't there be criminal liability for this? This directly harms Poland itself because many people won't distinguish whether it’s a bot farm or a real person. They see chauvinistic comments and develop a hostile attitude toward Poland. This is exactly Russia’s goal. Back in 2022, no one believed their propaganda that Poland was preparing to attack Ukraine, so now they’ve switched to more subtle methods. If Russia continues to provoke terrorist states like Iran or use its own proxies, there is a serious threat of retaliatory provocations or even terrorist attacks. I believe states must take the actions of Russian bot farms operating in their name far more seriously. I must remind everyone that inciting hatred based on nationality (Article 256 of the Polish Penal Code) and calling for an aggressive war are serious crimes. Polish authorities actively monitor the internet, so real Polish citizens would likely be afraid to post such things. Of course, if a bot is located in St. Petersburg (at the infamous 'troll factory'), Polish law cannot reach them. However, Poland should consider implementing additional sanctions against the Russian Federation, such as restricting Russian access to Western internet infrastructure (VPN too). And a crucial question remains: why are social media platforms still failing to block these bot farms?







@khadajinmg Прочитай історію - навіть поляки пишуть, що вони цю страву взяли з України і в них навіть назва "Пироги руські"









Wołodymyr Zełenski informuje, że nadwyżka uzbrojenia z Ukrainy trafi na eksport: „Eksport ukraińskiej broni będzie rzeczywistością. Ukraińskie wojsko zawsze będzie miało prawo pierwszeństwa i odpowiedniego wolumenu: armia weźmie to, czego potrzebuje, a wszystko ponad tę ilość trafi na eksport.” Zyski z eksportu mają finansować obronę kraju. Za ramy współpracy eksportowej odpowiadać ma Rada Bezpieczeństwa Narodowego i Obrony Ukrainy, działająca w oparciu o umowy międzynarodowe z partnerami.



Nothing special, just Dua Lipa eating Ukrainian varenyky in Warsaw


























