Foreign Affairs
Related: About this forumRussians Are Finally Feeling the War - Professor Gerdes Explains 🇺🇦
As refinery fires burn, airports face disruptions, and concerns spread across Russian social media, a larger question emerges: what happens when a population that was told victory was inevitable begins to realize the war is affecting them directly?
Chapters
0:00 The War Comes Home to Russia
0:29 Moscow Residents React to Drone Strikes
8:03 Kremlin Propaganda Tries to Reframe the Story
10:13 Why Russians Are Starting to Question the Narrative
15:06 The Growing Gap Between Reality and Propaganda
17:20 Final Thoughts and Viewer Shoutout
Lovie777
(24,408 posts)Warpy
(114,755 posts)and most Russian vacationers with their cars lined up waiting for a ferry that is now on fire somewhere were not told anything about the war except that Russia was on its way to a glorious victory and oh, look, there's a fantastic vacation package to Crimea this year.
Never mind the package was a cramped room in a high rise on an oil covered beach facing oil slicked water and the sounds of gunfire and explosions day and night. No the ferry boars capable of crrying cars have been knocked out in the last few days, they're all lined up with nowhere to go, even if they filled their tanks with black market gas. The bridge is rated for only a few cars at a time, nothing bigger than a momvan.
I always said an invasion to retake Crimea was probably not necessary, all Ukraine had to do is make it too shitty for tourism sand too expensive to maintain a military presence. Looks like someone was thinking the same way.
Martin68
(28,265 posts)is affecting them directly?" Inflation, out of control gas and diesel prices, etc?
cyclonefence
(5,170 posts)This guy kind of pissed me off, seeming blind to the fact that *we're* in a war we never wanted--what is this kid supposed to do about it? *Our* bloggers and podcasters sure aren't able to make Trump stop *our* war.
And what's his problem about a young woman applying makeup?
Sheesh.