Recevez notre Marketbriefing
In the same category
bogza
Member since May 2012
28 commentaries -
Follows 1 member
0 followers
has posted a comment on the article :
>What Obama Should Be Saying About Ukraine and Crimea  - Michael S. Rozeff - Lew Rockwell
Dear Michael ,
I already commented on the article Ron about his thoughts regarding the situation in Ukraine and in particular in the Crimea. I wonder where you have the same thoughts and conclusions. which coincide exactly with the thoughts and actions of Putin. This dictator . who puts himself above everyone and everything , which airs applies to all countries and peoples , including to America and Western countries . I was born and live in Ukraine and I know the current situation in the Crimea. Do not you know that the former legetivny , as you say, President Yanukovych was convicted three times for robbery and is actually a criminal. On his orders on the Maidan in Kiev were killed 100 people , so he fled to Russia because Putin is now a friend to all criminals and criminal governments around the world . Putin and other leaders say that he was selected in 2010 by the majority , but they forget to say that he had deceived the whole Ukrainian nation , promised democracy, but made ​​real dictatorship . In addition, he hid from all its dark past and his criminal record. Currently the head of government of the Crimea were people with criminal records that there are bandits . Look, you do not want to now such as Alaska suddenly wanted to secede from the country? Incidentally, in the Russian media , as well as in official circles , more often heard statements about returning Native Russia . I say if Putin does not stop now , it can be very serious consequences for many countries, especially against Poland , Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Finland, Japan and even America itself . How do you like the prospect ?


Commented
3702 days ago
-
Send
Beginning of the headline :I’ll be extracting some quotes from an article published in 1995 titled “Public support for the devolution of power in Ukraine: Regional patterns.” Written by Vicki Hesli, now a professor of political science at the University of Iowa, it appeared in a refereed academic journal, Europe-Asia Studies, vol. 47, No. 1, 1995, 91-121. I’ll mainly be drawing conclusions from the article’s content. Hesli writes “The issue of jurisdictional division of decision-making authority between central and region... Read More
Reply to this comment
You must be logged in to comment an article8000 characters max.
Log in or Sign up
Top articles