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March 18th, 2018 | #1 |
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Thank You Russia! Russia election: Vladimir Putin wins by big margin
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March 18th, 2018 | #2 |
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The kikenmedia react predictably
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/russian...ed-2018-03-18/
He isn't perfect, but Putin is ten times better a president than we have had for over 100 years. |
March 18th, 2018 | #3 |
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Rising living standards, wages, life expectancy, and now the 5th largest economy in the world under Putin's management. Despite "western" (jew) sanctions.
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March 18th, 2018 | #4 |
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LOL. Good for him.
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March 18th, 2018 | #5 |
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Even though he betrayed the Russians in former Jewkraine, by allowing the jew Maidan to succeed, and then not intervening when it happened, it's still good news.
Navalny and the other fifth columnists should be eliminated,
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Christianity and Feminism, the two deadliest poisons jews gave to the White Race ''Screw your optics, I'm going in'', American hero Robert Gregory Bowers |
March 18th, 2018 | #6 | |
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Quote:
Thanks for your input. If it's good news for you, it's good news for me. 14/88 Erik
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March 18th, 2018 | #7 |
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With him the hope of the White Race. Long Live Putin! |
March 19th, 2018 | #8 |
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You mean his inaction in ukraine. He dropped the ball there that's for sure. Nevertheless we must still support him as there is simply no alternative at the moment.
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Christianity and Feminism, the two deadliest poisons jews gave to the White Race ''Screw your optics, I'm going in'', American hero Robert Gregory Bowers |
March 19th, 2018 | #9 |
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Our savior won, praise God.
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March 19th, 2018 | #10 | |
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Putin should have won by even more. West certainly meddled here
Quote:
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Christianity and Feminism, the two deadliest poisons jews gave to the White Race ''Screw your optics, I'm going in'', American hero Robert Gregory Bowers |
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March 19th, 2018 | #11 |
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From the soulless globalist social leftists at the FT
Few clues to Putin’s intentions after big Russian election win President wants military build-up to win foreign respect but economy needs investment Six years ago, a grim-faced Vladimir Putin climbed on to a stage on Manezh Square outside the Kremlin to address his supporters. He had won the presidential election, but only in the face of massive street protests calling for a “Russia without Putin”. On Sunday, having secured another six-year term as president after more than 18 years in power, a beaming Mr Putin delivered a rousing victory speech, telling Russians: “Success awaits us! ”According to preliminary results based on more than 99 per cent of ballots counted, he had bagged 76.66 per cent of the vote, or more than 56m votes — a personal record. The triumph did not come easily. For months, the Kremlin had put intense pressure on regional governors to get Mr Putin at least 70 per cent of the vote with a turnout of at least 70 per cent — in other words, the endorsement of an absolute majority of the adult Russian population. In many regions, the authorities openly put pressure on voters to deliver Mr Putin his prize. Golos, Russia’s most experienced independent election monitoring group, recorded widespread instances of civil servants, employees of large companies, soldiers and students being herded to the polls and in some cases leaned on to vote for Mr Putin. Despite the massive mobilisation, turnout was 67.47 per cent, missing Mr Putin’s target although 4 percentage points higher than six years ago. And although the landslide victory has given Mr Putin a new mandate, it is not at all clear what the Russian president will do with it. In his March 1 state of the nation speech, Mr Putin laid out two contradictory if not mutually exclusive agendas: an economic reform push that would drastically change people’s lives for the better and a bid to force the west to respect Russia with what he called “invincible” new nuclear weapons. Mr Putin’s critics look ahead with trepidation. “Life will get worse, but turnout will get higher with every election, the rating of the president will get higher and North Korea will get ever closer,” Yevgeny Roizman, the maverick mayor of Yekaterinburg, Russia’s fourth-largest city, wrote on Twitter on Sunday. In his first four-year term from 2000, Mr Putin focused on returning a sense of basic security to the country by crushing an Islamist insurgency in Chechnya and trying to rebuild the authority of the state after a decade of chaotic transition from Communism. During his next four years in office, soaring oil prices helped ever larger numbers of Russians regain economic security and even achieve prosperity. Mr Putin’s decision to respect the constitutional limit of two consecutive presidential terms and let his prime minister Dmitry Medvedev become president in 2008 appealed to the country’s nascent middle class, especially as Mr Medvedev appeared to pursue a course of modernisation and friendlier relations with the west. But many reacted with scorn to massive falsifications in the 2011 parliamentary election and the news that Mr Putin would rotate back into the presidential post the following year. In the face of this opposition Mr Putin embarked on a drive to promote conservative values, sideline and even suppress liberal opposition, and provoke a geopolitical clash with the west. Two years ago, when the Russian economy was in a deep recession sparked by the global fall in oil prices and made more painful by western sanctions over Moscow’s annexation of Crimea and meddling in eastern Ukraine, there was a flicker of hope among reform-minded Russian officials that Mr Putin would change course. He had just appointed former finance minister Alexei Kudrin to come up with an economic policy strategy for the country. Many of Mr Kudrin’s supporters thought Mr Putin might make wide-ranging structural reforms to the core agenda for his next term, thus offering the chance of a new boost to economic growth. But that optimism is long gone. Although Mr Putin paid lip service to some of Mr Kudrin’s proposals, urging in his state of the nation speech in March that “we must . . . open the country to the world and new ideas and initiatives” and “we need to get rid of anything that stands in the way of our development”, he also embraced competing demands such as promises of drastic increases in social spending and a belligerent foreign policy with a focus on developing military power. Even having won his sweeping victory, Mr Putin has not offered any additional clarity. “We will not be led by some short-term considerations. We will think about the future of our great fatherland, the future of our children,” he told supporters on Sunday night. “And in that, we are undoubtedly destined for success.” Even if this statement could be understood as pursuing economic prosperity at home, there is little doubt that Mr Putin’s focus will be on battling his adversaries abroad. In the wake of the nerve agent attack in the UK on former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, apprehension over a Russia perceived as increasingly dangerous appears to have prompted western capitals to present a united front towards Moscow, and Russia seems likely to face further sanctions. Despite Mr Putin’s strong showing in the elections, Russian political experts warn that the population’s patience with economic pain and international isolation will not last for ever. The “Crimea consensus” — the Russian public’s willingness to endure economic hardship amid enthusiasm over Mr Putin’s perceived restoration of the country’s glory — “continues to work but it is gradually eroding”, says Mikhail Vinogradov, a political analyst. Konstantin Kostin, a former Kremlin official and head of the consultancy Civil Society Development Foundation, believes Mr Putin will have to balance his geopolitical agenda with the pressing need to fight poverty and income inequality and improve healthcare and education. While the part of Mr Putin’s pre-election speech that focused on economic prosperity had looked less meaningful than his nuclear posturing, Mr Kostin says the latter is “a factor in the process of achieving the first, and the first has immense significance for Putin’s core electorate”. Many people who said they voted for Mr Putin confirm this. “I did vote for him, yes. I would have been asked a lot of uncomfortable questions if I hadn’t,” says Alexei, an employee in a state company in the Urals region of Perm. “But he isn’t doing what we need him to do. We need better roads, better hospitals, better schools. In other words, more investment, more money.”
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March 19th, 2018 | #12 |
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After the presidential election - https://vnnforum.com/showpost.php?p=...&postcount=794
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March 19th, 2018 | #13 |
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All the SF Russia trolls seem to be silent.
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"Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy." --Henry A. Kissinger, jewish politician and advisor |
March 19th, 2018 | #14 | |
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It is time the bear poked back
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Dammit, I am seriously debating moving to Russia, although not immediately. Perhaps in a few years. |
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March 20th, 2018 | #15 |
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Hopefully all this western war mongering and anti-Russian sentiment will be futile because the last thing the dwindling white race needs is another brother vs brother war.
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March 20th, 2018 | #16 |
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Trump CONGRATULATES Putin on his big win-despite his national security advisers telling him not to
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...cid=spartanntp
Security adviser-Don't do it!!! Trump-GFY. Congrats, Putin!!! |
March 21st, 2018 | #17 |
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You don't see our "leaders" doing this
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"Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy." --Henry A. Kissinger, jewish politician and advisor |
March 21st, 2018 | #18 |
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What will you say when we hang him up?
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March 21st, 2018 | #19 |
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Well, KEK, KEK, KEK!!!! If it isn't little Pisspot Poison in one of his many forms!!!
You are a part of the "we" who will "hang him up????" It would be "string him up" you retard!!!! You, who on Censorcunt are an expert in all things irrelevant!!!! You on Censorcunt who runs "Computer Talk" and can't answer simple questions!!!! You, who on Censorcunt dazzle some people with the "clarity of your posts and command of English!!!!" You still haven't told me how well you did in rheology, or organic chemistry, or calculus. Can you provide solutions for triple integrals??? I can. Your "we" couldn't hang Putin if HE gave you the rope!!!! 14/88 Erik
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Whites are afraid to speak out against their enemies, let alone act out. This must change ~ Alex Linder Sweat saves blood, blood saves lives, but brains saves both. ~ Erwin Rommel |
March 21st, 2018 | #20 | |
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Russia Calls Out False Flag Poisoning
https://dailystormer.name/russia-cal...-for-war-lads/ I agree with this as well Quote:
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Christianity and Feminism, the two deadliest poisons jews gave to the White Race ''Screw your optics, I'm going in'', American hero Robert Gregory Bowers |
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elections, putin, russia |
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