J
josie_L
Guest
No, you don’t get off that easily it’s not enough to say that information is being distorted on both sides without providing what those lies are? I have been reading tons and tons of stories and the only ones that don’t vibe are the ones provided by Russian sources, this is not a coincidence. Most of us have already demonstrated that the Russian propaganda machine has lied throughout this thread, while Kyiv has just pointed out several other lies that RT has spread.Exactly. Look i’m not picking a fight, I’m not going to talk about the lies, because i have no clue. However I know that information is being distorted on BOTH sides. Both are manipulating the situation in the media probably.
I’m not anti-Russian, I’m anti-Kremlin and/or anti-Putin, I feel sorry for the Russians who are deprived of basic rights in their own country, and although you’re going to deny this because, well, it’s a Western source, here goes anyways:I do not care about Russian politics and news spin nor do I care for Euro-American politics and news spin. If I see a large number of western Catholic’s condeming Russia on a Forum, it’s clear that their information is coming directly from their western news/political spin. Josie, it sounds to me that you are eating up the negative anti-russian spin in current western news. Equally, one ALWAYS finds anti-western spin in russian news. This is clearly the wrong way to look at this situation - through the lens of the polictial stance of the country. Howeverm, when the two opposed and biased sources agree, you find what is probably true.
Around 50,000 people marched through central Moscow on Saturday in protest at Russia’s intervention in Ukraine, a day before the Crimean peninsula votes on switching to Kremlin rule. Waving Ukrainian and Russian flags and adopting the chants of Ukraine’s popular uprising, prominent and ordinary Russians urged Russian President Vladimir Putin to pull troops back from ex-Soviet Ukraine.
Marchers carried placards reading “Putin, get out of Ukraine” and others comparing Kremlin’s decision to send troops to Crimea with the Nazi annexation of the Sudetenland as Europe rushed headlong into World War II. A group of demonstrators held a banner reading: “Take the Russian troops home,” while one protester carried a copy of George Orwell’s dystopian novel “1984.”
Some shouted the war-time battle cry of Ukrainian nationalists that has become the most famous chant of the Kiev uprising that ousted President Viktor Yanukovych - “Glory to Ukraine! Glory to heroes!” Members of anti-Kremlin punk ***** Riot compared Russia’s invasion of Crimea that plunged the country into a Cold-War style confrontation with the West to the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968.
“How can a referendum under the barrels of guns be legitimate and fair?” ***** Riot member Maria Alyokhina asked during a rally after the march, a Russian flag in her hand. “I don’t want the troops to be stationed in Crimea,” added protester Vladimir Murashev, 58, noting his son was in the army. “I do not want him to be sent there.”
University professor Yelena Orlova, 47, whose sign read “Ukraine is a sovereign state”, said she was against "the annexation of Crimea. “I think Russia should respect the borders of Ukraine.” The huge column of people snaked along a central boulevard before the protesters gathered for a rally on Sakharov Avenue, the scene of huge anti-Putin rallies that shook Russia in 2011-12.
brecorder.com/top-stories/0/1162992/In Kiev, lawmakers in parliament gave the Russian protesters a standing ovation. “We should say thank you to our Russian friends,” said Volodymyr Aryev, a lawmaker with the pro-Western Batkivshchyna party. “Don’t shoot,” chanted the crowd as speaker after speaker denounced the Kremlin’s policies from the stage. “We are patriots and Putin is Russia’s enemy,” said activist Ilya Yashin.
See, there you go again, i.e., there was no violence until Yanukovych initiated the order to shoot protestors with rubber bullets in the eyes and throat, and that is when things began to escalate. The protestors were not violent by nature (as is attested by the lack of violence after the ousting of Yanukovych and the relative calm in Kyiv since then). Moreover, the troops have been identified as Russian, enough people (foreign journalists and Ukrainians) have corroborated this, even the Kremlin has much admitted this when they said it wasn’t an invasion if the new Crimean government asked for their help.What do both agree on? there has been a vote and nearly everybody turned up. There are unmarked troops around crimea, there were violent right-protests in Kiev during the first uprising. What else is agreed upon?
Ukrainian Catholic priests have already been kidnapped, albeit released, Tatars have had painted crosses on their doors like under soviet rule right after they were deported by the Soviets, and Greek Catholics have been threatened. Moreover, Catholicism is not even a recognized religion in Russia, i.e., there is discrimination against Catholics in Russia, but please don’t take my word for it.Look, at the end of the day, as long as one side or the other is not attacking the Church, and people do not needlessly suffer abuse, persceution and physical violence, I have no care for the Politics going on over there. It’s not my Business, My business is the physical, mental and spritual health and well being of my brothers and sisters in Christ. All that matters is that the core doctines of the Church are given as rights for my bothers and sisters, ie. the ten comandments.