Donald Trump

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  • Catherine21
    Catherine21 Online Community Member Posts: 9,796 Championing

    When they said he should have worn a suit lucky they didn't see him in his tutu and dancing in his heels

  • Wibbles
    Wibbles Online Community Member Posts: 3,429 Championing

    Putin is now warning against European troops in Ukraine as PEACE keepers

    He claims that this would be seen as an "Act of War" by Russia

  • Catherine21
    Catherine21 Online Community Member Posts: 9,796 Championing

    All of it is all scripted for our benefit The world is a stage

  • egister
    egister Posts: 1,110 Pioneering

    Now? Please note the date of the interview.

    wikipedia:

    He is a member of the Tolstoy family and Leo Tolstoy's great-great-grandson.

    [23][24]

  • egister
    egister Posts: 1,110 Pioneering

    You can search the internet to see him dancing in heels.

  • Wibbles
    Wibbles Online Community Member Posts: 3,429 Championing

    Totally untrue - Putin comes from a long line of Peasants !

  • Wibbles
    Wibbles Online Community Member Posts: 3,429 Championing
  • Andi66
    Andi66 Online Community Member Posts: 1,397 Championing

    Apart from deporting foreign criminals which we can't see to.do because of lawyers. He is a idiot. Seems to be siding with putin. That meeting with zelensky, I watched the whole one , seemed spiteful. Zelensky may of come across a bit rude to some of what the media is saying, but English isn't his first language. When he showed trump the pictures of the atrocities in Ukraine, trump barely acknowledged them. Now the Ukrainian people who went there under Biden may be kicked out, not sure how true this is.

  • Albus_Alumni
    Albus_Alumni Scope alumni Posts: 11,423 Championing

    It's unfortunately true @Andi66 Trump signed an executive order yesterday to remove their status. So they'll all be kicked out of the USA if it goes ahead. Though I'm sure there'll be plenty of people trying to block that happening through the courts..

  • Andi66
    Andi66 Online Community Member Posts: 1,397 Championing

    It's barbaric, those poor people that been bombed and had their family and friends killed. Now have this. He was sympathetic with putin about the messages during the meeting with zelensky

  • Santosha12
    Santosha12 Online Community Member Posts: 4,133 Championing

    @MW123 I agree with you about the UK government should not be pushing sick and disabled into work/cuts and not supporting the vulnerable in the UK. We (the sick and disabled) should not bear the burden of foreign policy/defence costs etc etc.

    I absolutely do support Ukraine and Europe's/Starmer's position on it re defence, unequivocally.

    Those two comments above are not mutually exclusive.

    I've said somewhere before, politics is about choices. There are many choices Labour could make but are choosing not to.

    I've never believed therefore in the sentiment 'charity begins at home'. There are wise, humane and considered options that Labour could choose but seem to not be choosing, we'll see on 26th March. I hope I'm wrong but I think public opinion is for massive benefit cuts and that the 'I'm alright Jack' phrase comes to mind; people think it will never happen to them and their everyday struggles reduce any sympathy they might have felt; the government's rhetoric spurs this on and creates division.

  • egister
    egister Posts: 1,110 Pioneering

    Tolstoy is Putin's mouthpiece. And these are definitely different people.

  • egister
    egister Posts: 1,110 Pioneering

    Obviously, Trump does not profit from the war in Ukraine, but only brings great expenses and the risk of a nuclear war. I would like to note that when Russian troops captured the territory around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in 2022, they left very quickly.

    https://www.anthonyburgess.org/blog-posts/anthony-burgess-and-russia/
    Not long after he returned to England, Burgess set down his impressions of Russia in an essay, ‘The Human Russians’, published in the Listener on 28 December 1961. Although he had gone to Leningrad expecting to find a cold, totalitarian state where all emotion had been crushed out of the people, what he found was ‘tremendous warmth’. Ordinary Russians were welcoming, he said, and the food was ‘coarse and delicious’. The pervasive smells of bad drains and cheap tobacco recalled his early years in Manchester. He also saw violent, well-dressed teenage boys who reminded him of the Teddy Boys at home in Britain. In his essay, Burgess represents Leningrad as a place of lawless drunkenness, where no attempt was made to deal with low-level criminality. ‘It is my honest opinion,’ he wrote, ‘that there are no police in Leningrad.’

    https://politiken.dk/internationalt/art5829489/En-slagsbrors-vej-til-toppen-Putin-voksede-op-i-en-jungle-hvor-det-handlede-om-at-v%C3%A6re-st%C3%A6rkest
    A brawler's path to the top: Putin grew up in a 'jungle' where it was all about being the strongest
    Vladimir Putin is both one of the most powerful and most enigmatic men in the world. We can still only guess what his real ambitions are. But perhaps his rough childhood in Leningrad provides a clue. Here is the first of three chapters on Vladimir Putin, his path to power and his inner circle.

    Maybe Antony Burgess met the little hooligan Putin in Leningrad? 😁

  • Andi66
    Andi66 Online Community Member Posts: 1,397 Championing

    I read that trump wants sanctions on Russia, I don't think he knows what he's doing. He should help Europe, we helped them with both Iraq and Afghanistan, Even though Vance distasteful comment about our involvement. Vance as well only knows what he's seen on tv , neither have them gone to Ukraine to see for themselves the destruction.

  • egister
    egister Posts: 1,110 Pioneering

    It is not clear why he SHOULD help Europe. I think there is a civil war going on there - for example, the commander-in-chief of Ukraine Syrskyi's parents still live in Russia and he himself was born in Russia.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oleksandr_Syrskyi
    And, let me remind you, Russian ships defended the North from France and Great Britain during the American Civil War.

  • Andi66
    Andi66 Online Community Member Posts: 1,397 Championing

    Yes but that was years ago. Ukraine during ww2 were on Germany side. My brother a history buff tell me this. But we are In the present day.

  • egister
    egister Posts: 1,110 Pioneering

    But civil war now! This is one of the explanations for its cruelty - everyone thinks that he is right, and the enemy is mistaken. In the previous civil war, Britain armed the losing side, since then British Mark V tanks stand there as monuments.

  • Wibbles
    Wibbles Online Community Member Posts: 3,429 Championing
    edited March 2025

    Wrong - Ukraine joined Soviet Union AGAINST Nazi Germany in WW2 !!!

    And stayed aligned with Soviet Union until 1991, when a referendum registered 81.7% of voters who wanted independence………..

  • egister
    egister Posts: 1,110 Pioneering

    haha!

    In Western Ukraine, which Stalin took from Poland in 1939 (Poland is part of the Russian Empire) and added to Soviet Ukraine, there was Bandera, who supported the Nazis. Stalin also took over parts of Hungary and Slovakia and added them to Soviet Ukraine, which is why Orban and Fico are against today's war. Eastern Ukraine, where the war is now, fought as partisans against the Nazis.
    Very very confusing.
    What is Great Britain doing in this tangle of snakes?

  • egister
    egister Posts: 1,110 Pioneering

    81.7% … Over 90%… What other numbers will there be? 1984%?

    Let me remind you that these referendums were held under the power and full control of the Communists. For example, EU Kaja Kallas' father has been a member of the Communist Party since 1970. Like Yeltsin (since 1961) and Putin (since 1975).
    So the collapse of the USSR was completely controlled by the communist authorities. Zelenskiy is the first who is outside the influence of the Communist Party and it seems he was unable to reach an agreement with the authorities of neighboring countries that left the CPSU.