FALLING DOMINOES: AN ARGUMENT FOR DECOLONIZING RUSSIA (UKR and RUS subtitles)

❗️❗️❗️ This is what will happen if Russia falls apart! ⚡️Patreon: 🔥 👀 🔥Telegram: 🔥 💥Twitter: 💥 ✔ YouTube sponsorships 🔥 👀 The Kremlin propaganda machine has worked hard to mislead the West – as well as its own people – with horrifying myths about what could happen if Russia was to collapse. The story goes that such an event would cause no less than a global catastrophe. And unfortunately, this fable has been accepted as the undeniable truth by many Western politicians and diplomats, who, in turn, are inclined to forgive the Kremlin’s wrongdoings, in a misguided attempt to prevent horrible global consequences. The tradition of such intimidation dates back to the times of the late USSR, when communist propaganda even managed to influence such politicians as Margaret Thatcher and George Bush Sr., who, on the eve of the collapse of the Soviet Union, called on the peoples enslaved by Moscow to remain within the renewed imperial concentration camp. Despite their appeals, the USSR faded into oblivion, and the overall living conditions for the former soviet citizens eventually significantly improved, despite the cries of those still nostalgic for the “good old days”. The modern Russian Federation is a territory inhabited by different nations practicing different religions. And these nations have absolutely no motive, except for force and coercion, to live in a single state. Moreover, the compulsion to preserve the empire condemns the population of the Russian Federation to languish in the conditions of authoritarianism, colonial exploitation of the regions and assimilation of practically enslaved peoples. Most will agree that a potential collapse of the Russian Empire could not be more catastrophic than the dissolution of the USSR, which therefore may be a fitting geopolitical reference point to use in disproving some of these myths. To further explore this matter, lets separate and carefully analyze each one in more detail: Text: Created based on materials from Yuri Garmatny (original article: ) Text adaptation, translation and narration: Oksana Chabanenko For those interested in exploring this topic further, we suggest a poignant article published in May 2022 by The Atlantic and written by a U.S. journalist Casey Michel:
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