http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/23669-ethnic-russians-are-people-too
So what does the New York Times have against Ukraines ethnic Russians? While the newspaper has fallen over itself insisting on the legitimacy of the coup regime in Kiev, despite its collaboration with neo-Nazis who spearheaded the Feb. 22 ouster of elected President Viktor Yanukovych, the Times editors cant hurl enough insults at the ethnic Russians in the east who have resisted the regimes authority.
For weeks, the Times has called the eastern Ukrainian rebel leaders self-declared and ridiculed the idea that there was any significant backing for the rejection of the Kiev-appointed regional leaders; all the trouble was simply stirred up by Vladimir Putin. Now, however, the referenda in the provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk have demonstrated what even a Times reporter acknowledged was substantial popular support for the pro-Russian separatists in some areas.
But the Times editors still wont give up their prejudices. For instance, Tuesdays lead editorial begins: If there were questions about the legitimacy of the separatist referendums in eastern Ukraine, the farcical names of the entities on which people were asked to vote the self-declared Peoples Republics of Donetsk or Luhansk surely answered them.
So, the votes and the desires of eastern Ukrainians shouldnt matter because the Times disapproves of the farcical names of the entities that people voted for.
The Times then suggests that violence that marred the referenda was the fault of the rebels, not the Kiev regimes National Guard, which includes the neo-Nazi militias that threw fire bombs at police during the Maidan protests in February and are now carrying out the most lethal attacks against protesters in cities in the east and south.
Of course, according to the Times narrative, these neo-Nazis from western Ukraine dont exist, so the violence must be palmed off on others or be treated like the natural occurrence of a spring thunderstorm. In Tuesdays editorial, the Times wrote: But the gathering rumble of violence accompanying the votes is serious and is driving the Ukrainian crisis in a direction that before long no one not President Vladimir Putin of Russia, not authorities in Kiev, not the West will be able to control.