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‼️ BREAKING NEWS ‼️

An Israeli babushka took down an Iranian hypersonic missile with a jar of gefilte fish!

❗️🐠
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Forwarded from Empath's Warrior Wisdom
And…How’s everyone’s bingo card looking 🙄

Think I’ll just sit, drink my coffee and smoke my cigarette ☕️🚬
Forwarded from Inessa S ️️
Caption this gem!
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Since the annual LGBT+whatever parade had to be cancelled in Israel in light of the current events, here's a very gay air raid alert announcement from Ukraine from a couple of years back to, hopefully, substitute for it just a little bit.

Translation of the lyrics if you care.

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Well, this is certainly a little weird: notice the two very obvious Russian flags in this "US Flag Day" message by the US Department of Defense.

Also, is that a typo with the missing apostrophe in the word "nations" or...?

What the flag?...

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A bit of much needed ket therapy is in order.

Sound on! 🔉

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«The first and main reason for the collapse of the USSR was the destruction of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union» - Sergey Shahray

At Beorn's Beehive, in connection with the Day of Russia, we have translated a historiographic article written by Sergey Shahray for Interfax and published on December 7, 2021, on the 30th anniversary of the destruction of the USSR. Read the first part here:

December 1991 was the last month of the Soviet Union’s existence. On December 1, Ukraine declared full state independence in a referendum, and on December 5, its Supreme Council denounced the Treaty establishing the USSR in 1922. Three days later, the leaders of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus signed an agreement on the creation of the CIS, which was joined a week and a half later at a meeting in Alma Ata by other republics that were part of the USSR.

On the eve of the 30th anniversary of the CIS, Honoured Lawyer of Russia, Professor Sergey Shakhray reflects on the reasons for the collapse of the Union in an article published on the pages of the Interfax project “30 years ago: chronicle of the last days of the USSR”.

The collapse of the USSR: only the facts

Thirty years have passed since the collapse of the USSR, which became not only a key geopolitical event of the late twentieth century, but also a huge personal tragedy for millions of Soviet citizens. The historiography of the “perestroika” and the disintegration of the USSR today has thousands of domestic and foreign publications. However, the key question remains the same: was the collapse of the USSR a historical accident that had no objective basis, or was the catastrophe natural and inevitable in the historical conditions prevailing at that time? As you know, diametrically opposed answers to this question were formulated back in the early 1990s, and so far neither scientific nor, especially, public consensus has been achieved.

Despite the fact that the history of the collapse of the Soviet Union itself goes further and further into the past, interest in this topic is growing. Today, when the world is constantly facing unexpected challenges and dramatic changes, the historical experience of managing large-scale socio-economic transformations, including the analysis of successes and disasters, as exemplified by the last years of the USSR, is of exceptional importance. The value of this kind of comparative research depends to a large extent on attention to documentary sources that demonstrate the relationship of the particularities of the decisions made with a specific historical context.

The documents and facts prove that under the prevailing historical conditions, starting from the end of August 1991, the collapse of the Soviet Union was inevitable. However, this conclusion is at odds with the concept of conspiracy, which has become established in the minds of many contemporaries and those who have never lived in the Soviet era and look at the events of the past through the prism of myths, emotions, and free interpretations.

It is an absolutely amazing phenomenon, when documents that are accessible to everyone, necessary for a comprehensive view of the whole picture of historical events, remain out of sight year after year not only of the general public, but also of specialists. Even more surprising is the fact that in the course of the attempts to return to scientific and public discourse, many documents that are important for understanding the process of the collapse of the USSR sometimes cause rejection, since filling in the gaps inevitably forms other chains of causes and effects. And the logic that grows out of the documentary and factual basis, taken without exceptions and omissions, turns out to be inconvenient and uncomfortable for those who value the myths of alternative history.

What were the key reasons for the disintegration of the USSR?

‼️ The first and main reason is the destruction of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. ...

👉 Continue reading at Beorn's Beehive

@BeornAndTheShieldmaiden
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North Korean military parade vs. US military parade.

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Plasticine Crow and more

As children, we all played with plasticine, creating figures or pictures, or just having fun. But what would happen if grown-ups stated playing with plasticine, like children?

On the New Year Eve of 2024, we presented a translation of "Last Year's Snow Was Falling", a plasticine animated film from 1983, directed by Alexander Tatarsky. That was, however not the first of his films using such animation technique.

In 1981, a series of three short animation films under the common title "Plasticine Crow", came out to the delight of kids — both small and big.

🖼 Trivia!

👉 "Or maybe... or maybe..." is very (and we mean, very) loosely based on Ivan Krylov's fable "The Crow and the Fox".
👉 At 4:10, right at the start of "Or maybe... or maybe...", a box of plasticine sold in the USSR can be seen in all its glory. Similar "stock" plasticine was used in the production of the animated film, though the creators had to mix in colour pigments to make the material more vibrant.
👉 The short film "About Paintings" uses drawings by children from the animation studio of the Central Republican Pioneers' Palace of Kiev.

👉 The animation film is available at our channels on Odysee and Rumble.

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2025/06/16 18:59:50
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