Idris2002
Christmas Eve, you know?
unless he's got me confused with somebody else?
"Mirror, mirror, on the wall. . . "
unless he's got me confused with somebody else?
...confused...
I don't know what this is about, and I've got CR on ignore, so don't know what I'm meant to have said. Basically in no way have I insulted any race over the course of this thread. unless he's got me confused with somebody else?
the woman...
has regularly levelled any slur going against the people in the south resisting Kiev .
The latest honest mistake in a long line . Set against a backdrop of blatant openly tolerated russophobia in western european media and on this site ive a perfect right to object to it and ask why such open hatred .
the rest of your post is just hysterical dishonest bollocks..pure and simple. Much like the last one.
Urgh, leaving all lies aside for the minute, "the woman", god you're a disgusting prick.
i think you have it.
confused as a newt... or just a bigotted, unpleasant, strongman obsessed creep who's views and words bare no relation whatsoever to the wider philosophy and ideology he claims to support? take your pick.
That is not what she said.
infamy..infamy
'theres a big pm campaign to have me bant. but I remain, the one true voice'
That stupid pic is from freerepublic. Makes you think.
Clashes broke out on Tuesday between demonstrators and police in front of Ukraine’s parliament in Kiev as deputies inside repeatedly voted down proposals to recognise a contentious second world war-era Ukrainian partisan group as national heroes.
Thousands of Svoboda nationalist party supporters rallied earlier in the capital in celebration of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, whose struggle for independence for Ukraine was tainted by its collaboration with the Nazis.
Later, masked men attacked and threw smoke grenades at lines of police outside parliament; Svoboda said its members were not responsible for the unrest, which police said was orchestrated by a small group of people at the rally. The interior ministry said 36 people were detained by police.
its from google image
In Ukraine the tumultuous social movement of last winter has been overtaken, divided, and almost silenced, by military conflict. It is a sobering contrast to those times in history, for example at the end of the first and second world wars, when military conflict produced social revolts. This article attempts to consider the historical parallels and what they mean for socialists.
Full details here.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-29702522
A leading human rights group says it has strong evidence Ukraine attacked populated areas of Donetsk with cluster bombs, banned by many other states.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) accuses the army of using the deadly weapon, which scatters bomblets, to shell the rebel-held eastern city earlier this month.
There was no comment from Ukraine, which did not sign up to the 2008 global treaty banning cluster bombs.
Meanwhile, new talks are due on Ukraine's gas dispute with Russia.
The book chapter on the sovnarkhozy looks okay (the whole thing is expensive).
I have a copy of Donald Filtzer's Soviet Workers and De-Stalinization if anyone wants it. It covers the above.
And the unintended effects of Communists fostering a more coherent Ukrainian nationalism in George O. Liber's Soviet Nationality Policy, Urban Growth, and Identity Change in the Ukrainian SSR 1923–1934.