Simple Facts

9.6K posts

Simple Facts

Simple Facts

@SimpleF12656939

On Twitter to document thesis on Brexit and Russian convergences in trolling. « if you have the choice of being right or being kind, be factual. »

Katılım Haziran 2022
350 Takip Edilen96 Takipçiler
Simple Facts retweetledi
Бианка
Бианка@BiankaB12·
To understand Russia, you have to think like a Russian. Analysing it through a Western lens will only take you so far. 1) Russia no longer wants this war, but it cannot simply stop it. Because…Pride. A self-declared “great power” cannot admit defeat - especially not against a country it regards as smaller, weaker and fundamentally inferior. Withdrawal would not merely be seen as a military failure, but as a humiliation and a collapse of Russia’s entire imperial self-image. 2) Russian leadership operates like a mafia hierarchy, built around strongman culture. If Putin retreats, it will be interpreted as weakness. He will be cannibalised by the very structure he created. Remember - this is a man obsessed with longevity, who has directed his own daughters towards scientific research and poured enormous resources into extending his own life. He is terrified of death! He will not voluntarily choose an outcome that could threaten his personal survival. 3) Russia has already paid an enormous demographic and economic price. More than one million Russians - including a disproportionate share of the educated, urban and technically skilled population - have left the country since 2022. Another estimated 1.4 million have been killed, wounded or permanently disabled from the war. The economy is under severe strain. Inflation is high. Russians queue for hours - and in some cases days - for fuel. Farmers are warning that shortages of diesel and fertiliser could severely disrupt agricultural production, raising the risk of food shortages. 4) Russia is also terrified of what happens when the soldiers come home. Sex workers in Russia have reportedly described a mass exodus from the industry because returning veterans are exceptionally violent, cruel and sadistic. The Kremlin has been explicit that it does not want to repeat the aftermath of the Soviet war in Afghanistan, when half a million soldiers returned from a failed war to a collapsing country. Many came home traumatised, brutalised and unable to reintegrate. Organised crime, addiction and social violence surged. Russia cannot simply stop this war. What it can do is: 1) Continue the war of attrition and keep losing slowly to Ukraine - at an enormous cost to Ukrainians as well. 2) Intensify its cognitive and political warfare - deepen divisions within Europe, drive a wedge between the EU and the United States, and help bring more Russia-friendly governments to power. governments willing to abandon Ukraine or pressure Kyiv into accepting an unfavourable settlement. 3) Beg Trump to negotiate some form of Korean-style stalemate: a frozen front that gives Russia several years to rebuild its forces, rearm and resume the war later. 4) As an absolute last resort, escalate by attacking the NATO alliance - triggering a conventional war that they lose quickly. Then, and only then, they can say: look, we lost, but we fought the ENTIRE West. Russia cannot win this war. But it cannot stop it either - not through any conventional or politically survivable route anyway. P.S.: No, nukes are not an option either.
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EUvsDisinfo
EUvsDisinfo@EUvsDisinfo·
Russia often portrays Ukrainian culture as ‘inseparable from Russian history’ in its propaganda.    The repeated targeting of Ukrainian cultural heritage tells a rather different story.
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Pierre de Gaulle
Pierre de Gaulle@PierredeGaulle·
Un défilé qui n'a plus rien de français et qui affiche, sans honte, la soumission de la France à l'Otan et aux USA. Combien de voitures seront brûlées pour célébrer cet abandon? franceinfo.fr/france/14-juil…
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EUvsDisinfo
EUvsDisinfo@EUvsDisinfo·
Throughout its illegal invasion, Russia has struck over 540 religious and cultural sites across Ukraine. With every drone and missile it launches, Russia exposes its claim of defending Orthodoxy for the lie it is.
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Simple Facts
Simple Facts@SimpleF12656939·
@AmourskyCyrille @CNEWS Cnews ne savait pas savoir que la Belgique n’est pas plus française que l’Ukraine n’est russe alors ils ont invité un Belge pro russe.
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Cyrille Amoursky
Cyrille Amoursky@AmourskyCyrille·
@CNEWS La chaîne n’a pas su trouver le moindre français pour venir cracher sur la fête nationale, alors ils ont fait appel à un sombre politicien belge d’extrême-droite. Fedorova de Russie 🇷🇺, Destexhe de Belgique 🇧🇪 - CNews est définitivement le parti de l’étranger.
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CNEWS
CNEWS@CNEWS·
14-Juillet : «Cela doit rester une fête française, Emmanuel Macron n'aurait pas dû inviter les Ukrainiens», fustige Alain Destexhe cnews.fr/france/2026-07…
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Simple Facts@SimpleF12656939·
@ACheinine Où voyez vous cela hormis dans votre imagination? Il s’agit d’une coalition de pays démocratiques œuvrant pour l’intégrité territoriale et le libre choix des Etats nations de décider de leur avenir. Est-ce être « anti russe »?
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Simple Facts
Simple Facts@SimpleF12656939·
@xfedorova J’aime la Russie. Quelle soit le seul pays au monde dirigé par des services secrets et en proie à des frustrations paranoïaques et dangereuses est un constat que partagent de nombreux citoyens du monde.
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Xenia Fedorova
Xenia Fedorova@xfedorova·
J’aime la France. Qu’elle soit mal gouvernée est malheureusement un constat que partagent de nombreux Français
jean-michel aphatie@jmaphatie

L’incroyable arrogance de @xfedorova demeure inexplicable. Si elle pense que la France qui l’accueille est un pays mal gouverné et dangereux, qu’elle le quitte. Personne ne l’oblige à demeurer dans un pays qu’elle haït. Par ailleurs, @cnews et ses journalistes @PascalPraud @christine_kelly @LaurenceFerrari et les autres dénoncent les jours pairs et impairs ces « Français qui n’aiment pas la France » et ils côtoient sans problèmes apparents une étrangère qui n’arrête pas de donner des leçons et de critiquer les dirigeants. La mauvaise foi comme projet de presse… Etonnant, non ?

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EUvsDisinfo
EUvsDisinfo@EUvsDisinfo·
The EU has sanctioned VK, the company behind Russia's state-backed MAX app. Mandatory on all phones and tablets sold in Russia and developed under FSB supervision, MAX is a cornerstone of the Kremlin's surveillance state. VK's role in building and enabling this ecosystem has helped facilitate the Kremlin's repression of civil society.
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Simple Facts@SimpleF12656939·
@LoeilduKremlin_ A la France de la proposer comme elle fit pour Xavier Moreau non? En aura-t-elle le courage et la volonté ?
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L'Œil du Kremlin
L'Œil du Kremlin@LoeilduKremlin_·
À ma connaissance, Xenia Fedorova n’est pas dans le dernier paquet de sanctions en discussion.
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Beefeater
Beefeater@Beefeater_Fella·
EU Imposes Sanctions on VK, Max Developer, Suppliers of Surveillance Equipment to Russian Security Forces, and Management of IK-10 Prison in Mordovia The EU Council has imposed sanctions against the Russian company VK, its subsidiary – the developer of the national messaging app Max, as well as the largest suppliers of equipment for the operational-investigative activities (SORM) system to Russian security forces. A total of 11 individuals and five organizations have been added to the sanctions list. The reasons cited include serious human rights violations, repression against civil society and the democratic opposition, as well as technical and material support for such actions. Sanctions have been imposed on VK and its "subsidiary" "Communication Platform," which develops and manages the Max application. According to the EU Council document, the development of the application was carried out under the control of the FSB, which determined the technical requirements for it. The EU Council also accuses VK of transferring user data to the Russian authorities, including data from users who published materials criticizing the war against Ukraine or other content prohibited by the authorities. Elena Bagudina, the CEO of "Communication Platform," has been added to the personal sanctions list. In addition, the companies VAS Experts, "Norsi-Trans," and "Tsitadel," which develop and supply software and hardware complexes for SORM, have been sanctioned. This system allows Russian security services to access telephone conversations, messages, email, internet traffic, location data, and other user information. According to the EU Council, SORM was used against journalists, opposition figures, anti-war activists, and ordinary citizens, as well as to block access to independent information and foreign internet resources. Along with the companies, their leaders have also been sanctioned: Dmitry Gachko, the CEO and ultimate owner of VAS Experts; Sergei Ovchinnikov, the executive director and ultimate owner of "Norsi-Trans"; and Mikhail Fomin, the executive director of "Tsitadel." Seven more individuals have been added to the list due to their activities at IK-10 prison in the settlement of Udarny in Mordovia: Alexander Gnutov, the head of the prison, and his deputies Alexei Anashkin, Yegor Averkin, Alexander Grishanin, Semyon Kuznetsov, and Ivan Veshkin, as well as Galina Mokshanova, the head of the prison's medical unit. The document states that the prison held hundreds of Ukrainian prisoners of war and civilians captured in occupied territories of Ukraine. Former inmates have reported beatings, electric shock torture, sexual violence, staged executions, painful stress positions, and denial of medical care. It is claimed that the civilians were held without trial and without a defined legal status. The EU Council has held the management of IK-10 responsible for torture and other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment.
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Kaja Kallas
Kaja Kallas@kajakallas·
We’re sanctioning Russia at speed and scale. Today’s measures, together with the upcoming 21st sanctions package, will add 250 individuals and entities to the Russia sanctions regime. This is our biggest round of individual designations since Moscow’s 2022 full-scale invasion, and includes also the EU’s largest-ever cyber sanctions package. The financial backbone of Russia’s war machine is the main target. Every measure weakens Moscow’s ability to wage war. My doorstep ahead of today’s Foreign Affairs Council ↓
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Simple Facts
Simple Facts@SimpleF12656939·
@Poulin2012 La Russie est devenue un État faible et peu fiable, lentement mais sûrement subjugué par la Chine. Dès Poutine parti, elle devra faire un choix existentiel. Attendons qu’elle arrête sa guerre et vienne nous supplier d’acheter son énergie, à notre meilleur avantage.
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Simple Facts retweetledi
Simple Facts retweetledi
Simple Facts
Simple Facts@SimpleF12656939·
@Lexlash24 @JrmeLauren39578 @xfedorova Ce n’est certainement pas le cas de la Russie en tout état de cause, qui se reconnaît elle même comme une fédération de peuples multiples. Les frontières historiques de l’Ukraine sont en effet plus larges mais ce n’est pas vraiment le sujet pour Poutine ni la cause de la guerre.
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Xenia Fedorova
Xenia Fedorova@xfedorova·
Le 14-Juillet n’est pas une cérémonie européenne. Ce n’est pas une parade de l’Otan. Ce n’est pas une scène destinée à prolonger la guerre par les symboles. C’est le jour où la France montre son armée, non pour se fondre dans un bloc, mais pour rappeler qu’elle reste maîtresse de son destin. La question est donc simple : jusqu’où veut-on entraîner la France dans cette guerre ? Si l’on veut que ce conflit devienne aussi le sien, qu’on le dise clairement aux Français. Qu’on leur demande leur avis. Mais qu’on n’utilise pas le prestige du 14-Juillet pour les habituer à l’idée que cette guerre serait déjà la leur, alors qu’une armée nationale existe d’abord pour défendre son pays et ses intérêts, non pour habiller les choix idéologiques de ses dirigeants sans consentement populaire
Xenia Fedorova tweet media
Le JDD@leJDD

Xenia Fedorova : «Quand la Fête nationale devient un message de guerre» ow.ly/BjIS106AI8Q

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kwyjiboo
kwyjiboo@kwyjiboo_·
@SimpleF12656939 @xfedorova Ferme ta gueule de sale va-t'en-guerre et va donc te battre sur le front avec "tes armées de la liberté" !
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Simple Facts
Simple Facts@SimpleF12656939·
@JrmeLauren39578 @xfedorova Les origines de cette guerre remontent en effet à la Moscou du KGB et l’incapacité d’assumer que l’Ukraine n’est pas la Russie et a le droit de se choisir un avenir. Il faut lire un peu au lieu de systématiquement céder à la propagande millénariste du Kremlin.
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Veymont
Veymont@JrmeLauren39578·
@SimpleF12656939 @xfedorova Non, c’est la fête nationale. La présence de l’armée ukrainienne dont la base idéologique est tout sauf claire est inacceptable. Quant à cette guerre, il faut revenir à ses origines qui remontent à l’URSS. Il faut lire un peu au lieu de systématiquement céder au manichéisme.
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