16,4 Мб, mp4,
640x480, 1:59
640x480, 1:59
webm mp4
>>17377 (OP)
context?
context?
>>17383
durka
durka
30,6 Мб, webm,
720x720, 3:47
720x720, 3:47
Hello from https://2ch.hk/wm/ (М)
2,8 Мб, mp4,
576x1024, 0:24
576x1024, 0:24
>>21303
loh, steady
loh, steady
32,5 Мб, mp4,
1280x720, 3:17
1280x720, 3:17
>>21212
here you go, scuf
here you go, scuf
>>21295
Hi, are you the zoomer troll from the webm threads in /b/?
I have something for you that you'll love.
Hi, are you the zoomer troll from the webm threads in /b/?
I have something for you that you'll love.
9,3 Мб, webm,
700x526, 2:02
700x526, 2:02
>>21212
here you go, bro
here you go, bro
A group of hackers who are putting NATO's infrastructure on the back burner
3,3 Мб, mp4,
576x1018, 0:13
576x1018, 0:13
>>21784
Хули ты моё видео (видрил 1) ксебе скопировал? Удаляй нахуй пока HEAD GIVE ME MONEY не заклювала тебе, тупой ты ублюдок.
Хули ты моё видео (видрил 1) ксебе скопировал? Удаляй нахуй пока HEAD GIVE ME MONEY не заклювала тебе, тупой ты ублюдок.
Dwa chaya etomu gospodinu >>21812
4,3 Мб, mp4,
640x360, 1:48
640x360, 1:48
Do you think they'll be similar songs about the war in Ukraine?
21,9 Мб, mp4,
1280x720, 3:06
1280x720, 3:06
>>21933
Why are poccnrs so good at making suffering litterature and music?
Why are poccnrs so good at making suffering litterature and music?
2,8 Мб, webm,
1422x794, 0:46
1422x794, 0:46
Hello anons, how are you doing today?
2 Мб, mp4,
560x704, 0:23
560x704, 0:23
>>21940
Not a year later, foreigners started sharing their webm" . Thank you""
"(that's a rebuke)
""(that's a thank you).
Not a year later, foreigners started sharing their webm" . Thank you""
"(that's a rebuke)
""(that's a thank you).
8 Мб, mp4,
1280x720, 0:22
1280x720, 0:22
>>21935
Because we are a great country (or something like that).
Because we are a great country (or something like that).
>>22144
Kasha iz topora, topchik.
Kasha iz topora, topchik.
>>22168
Gem
Gem
30 Кб, 182x260
Да блять мог бы RUSOWAVE сделать отдельный а не срать в общий тред, еблан свинявый. Свинья как всегда.
>>22678
gem
gem
5,4 Мб, mp4,
720x480, 6:19
720x480, 6:19
Jew with Medal offered by Third Reich
3 Мб, mp4,
720x720, 0:27
720x720, 0:27
>>22913
Watched&Saved
Watched&Saved
>>23244
Я сначала подумал, что это ВЖ Линк.
Я сначала подумал, что это ВЖ Линк.
>>23699
You eat something tasty and say "m-m-m-m-m-m", thats what mm stands for.
You eat something tasty and say "m-m-m-m-m-m", thats what mm stands for.
>>23965
Спасибо, подрочил.
Спасибо, подрочил.
3,4 Мб, mp4,
640x1136, 0:155,9 Мб, mp4,
544x480, 0:4819,1 Мб, webm,
640x480, 3:545,2 Мб, mp4,
480x360, 1:09
640x1136, 0:155,9 Мб, mp4,
544x480, 0:4819,1 Мб, webm,
640x480, 3:545,2 Мб, mp4,
480x360, 1:09
>>21958
nice
nice
2,9 Мб, webm,
576x1024, 0:08
576x1024, 0:08
>>21810
Holy shit neger is that the same girl from this webm? I asked in the other thread and no one told me. KURWA MAC
Holy shit neger is that the same girl from this webm? I asked in the other thread and no one told me. KURWA MAC
>>22546
What the fuck is the one on the left from?
What the fuck is the one on the left from?
>>24372
All is the same internationally. We all living in Amerika, Amerika is woundabar. If before the internet we had some barrier it's gone now and being gone for a decede.
All is the same internationally. We all living in Amerika, Amerika is woundabar. If before the internet we had some barrier it's gone now and being gone for a decede.
>>24373
I forgot. Try skrolling edit music compoletion.
I forgot. Try skrolling edit music compoletion.
>>22513
Now do Kensington
Now do Kensington
Brazil
>>24462
Anti-nigger miliitia ?
Anti-nigger miliitia ?
1,9 Мб, webm,
350x949, 1:07
350x949, 1:07
again: this new captcha is not funny.
17,2 Мб, mp4,
480x360, 4:15
480x360, 4:15
русскоязычная капча на борде для иностраусов это вы конечно ахуеть как смешно придумали
>>24561
Thanks, abu
Thanks, abu
>>25610
comfy
comfy
>>26351
Aussies are finally starting to share their women, not just stealing glances at ours.
Aussies are finally starting to share their women, not just stealing glances at ours.
>>26629
probably an ethnic Portuguese 55-70y jealous taxi driver or former taxi driver or pensioner.
He parked in the taxi parking spots but scratching the car is disproportionate.
probably an ethnic Portuguese 55-70y jealous taxi driver or former taxi driver or pensioner.
He parked in the taxi parking spots but scratching the car is disproportionate.
>>26361
MORE
MORE
Post webm with two Ossetian girls dissing a jew on a webcam chat.
>>27366
Electric trams with 100y design and older machinery https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trams_in_Lisbon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L09q5AO7jSk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeOKbIxXk9c
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIfRaOHbfaA
Electric trams with 100y design and older machinery https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trams_in_Lisbon
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L09q5AO7jSk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeOKbIxXk9c
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIfRaOHbfaA
1,9 Мб, mp4,
960x704, 0:16
960x704, 0:16
If Trump's secret service agents were like this
>>27596
Wow, a real Brazilian.
Wow, a real Brazilian.
At the second video, one undercover police officer, after pursuing some drug dealers that ran away, meets a police elite squad (BOPE) who thinks he is a drug leader, and a shootout begins, ending only when another police officer gets into scene and tells both sides that they are in the same team.
4,5 Мб, mp4,
960x540, 0:32
960x540, 0:32
>>17377 (OP)
“Not today, depressive bitch” - came a voice from behind the clouds...
“Not today, depressive bitch” - came a voice from behind the clouds...
>>27614
Thanks for the video. Although, occasionally someone creates Dark webm threads in /b/ where they post atrocities of Brazilian drug cartels, it's still “Rare” in terms of international limited distribution to national content.
After watching it, I had some questions:
1. Do gangsters in Brazil really have that much power?
2. Why has it been so long since they were consolidated and they still exist?
3. How serious is the drug problem in Brazil?
Thanks for the video. Although, occasionally someone creates Dark webm threads in /b/ where they post atrocities of Brazilian drug cartels, it's still “Rare” in terms of international limited distribution to national content.
After watching it, I had some questions:
1. Do gangsters in Brazil really have that much power?
2. Why has it been so long since they were consolidated and they still exist?
3. How serious is the drug problem in Brazil?
1. In Rio de Janeiro, yes, without any doubt. They have .50 guns like the one in the pic related, which was seized by the police, antitank artillery, and recently they use drones (not military drones, but ones like in the pic related) to monitor and even drop bombs on other gangs (there are four in Rio: Comando Vermelho (the biggest one), Terceiro Comando Puro, Amigos dos Amigos, and the Militia (initially formed by corrupt cops, but recently by gangsters in general)). They are literally parallel states. During the pandemic, the police were prohibited by the Supreme Court (the same one that had a beef with Elon Musk for censoring Brazilian right-wing accounts on social media) from entering the favelas except in extreme cases, so they consolidated their power even more. They elect city councilors and sometimes (though it is rare) even senators, through their influence on the population of the favelas, which are millions of people. Nowadays, the police can't raid the big favelas too often because of what I mentioned previously. When they do, they go with 20+ men and kill dozens of gangsters, like in the Jacarezinho "massacre". They still raid the smaller favelas on a daily basis though.
This whole situation I mentioned is exclusive to the state of Rio de Janeiro and a few other regions. In the majority of the country, drug dealing and general crime are controlled by a single mafia called Primeiro Comando da Capital, which has worldwide connections, most notably with the 'Ndrangheta, and is smarter and more lucrative than the combative gangsters of Rio de Janeiro. The PCC doesn't stimulate violence, as it is bad for business, and even helped to diminish it.
2. I don't know, honestly. It's easy to say that it is because of corrupt politicians, but the reality may be more complex than that. I think that because of left-wing politicians, gangsters are treated as victims, and because of that we don't have the 'Bukele solution' needed. The army took the biggest favelas in 2010, but it lasted only a few months and never happened again.
I can tell you how the problem started in Rio though. It started in the 80s with a left-wing politician called Brizola who made an informal deal with the gangsters along the lines of "the police won't go to the favelas if you don't take crime outside of it" and prohibited the police from going there. The gangs started arming themselves with more powerful weapons to fight each other, which didn't happen outside of Rio because of the existence of a single mafia previously mentioned, and then we got here, with favelas being literal fortress, having embrasures like in the third pic.
3. The problem here is not any bigger than in Europe or the USA. The state capitals have their share of drug addicts, but at the rest of the country it is not that big of a deal. The Rio gangsters make the majority of their profit by extorting "their" citizens (at least in the favelas they don't have to pay taxes or even for energy or gas as it is all stolen lol), stealing cargo, and assaulting banks. And the Primeiro Comando da Capital is more concerned with exporting drugs than selling them inside Brazil.
This whole situation I mentioned is exclusive to the state of Rio de Janeiro and a few other regions. In the majority of the country, drug dealing and general crime are controlled by a single mafia called Primeiro Comando da Capital, which has worldwide connections, most notably with the 'Ndrangheta, and is smarter and more lucrative than the combative gangsters of Rio de Janeiro. The PCC doesn't stimulate violence, as it is bad for business, and even helped to diminish it.
2. I don't know, honestly. It's easy to say that it is because of corrupt politicians, but the reality may be more complex than that. I think that because of left-wing politicians, gangsters are treated as victims, and because of that we don't have the 'Bukele solution' needed. The army took the biggest favelas in 2010, but it lasted only a few months and never happened again.
I can tell you how the problem started in Rio though. It started in the 80s with a left-wing politician called Brizola who made an informal deal with the gangsters along the lines of "the police won't go to the favelas if you don't take crime outside of it" and prohibited the police from going there. The gangs started arming themselves with more powerful weapons to fight each other, which didn't happen outside of Rio because of the existence of a single mafia previously mentioned, and then we got here, with favelas being literal fortress, having embrasures like in the third pic.
3. The problem here is not any bigger than in Europe or the USA. The state capitals have their share of drug addicts, but at the rest of the country it is not that big of a deal. The Rio gangsters make the majority of their profit by extorting "their" citizens (at least in the favelas they don't have to pay taxes or even for energy or gas as it is all stolen lol), stealing cargo, and assaulting banks. And the Primeiro Comando da Capital is more concerned with exporting drugs than selling them inside Brazil.
1. In Rio de Janeiro, yes, without any doubt. They have .50 guns like the one in the pic related, which was seized by the police, antitank artillery, and recently they use drones (not military drones, but ones like in the pic related) to monitor and even drop bombs on other gangs (there are four in Rio: Comando Vermelho (the biggest one), Terceiro Comando Puro, Amigos dos Amigos, and the Militia (initially formed by corrupt cops, but recently by gangsters in general)). They are literally parallel states. During the pandemic, the police were prohibited by the Supreme Court (the same one that had a beef with Elon Musk for censoring Brazilian right-wing accounts on social media) from entering the favelas except in extreme cases, so they consolidated their power even more. They elect city councilors and sometimes (though it is rare) even senators, through their influence on the population of the favelas, which are millions of people. Nowadays, the police can't raid the big favelas too often because of what I mentioned previously. When they do, they go with 20+ men and kill dozens of gangsters, like in the Jacarezinho "massacre". They still raid the smaller favelas on a daily basis though.
This whole situation I mentioned is exclusive to the state of Rio de Janeiro and a few other regions. In the majority of the country, drug dealing and general crime are controlled by a single mafia called Primeiro Comando da Capital, which has worldwide connections, most notably with the 'Ndrangheta, and is smarter and more lucrative than the combative gangsters of Rio de Janeiro. The PCC doesn't stimulate violence, as it is bad for business, and even helped to diminish it.
2. I don't know, honestly. It's easy to say that it is because of corrupt politicians, but the reality may be more complex than that. I think that because of left-wing politicians, gangsters are treated as victims, and because of that we don't have the 'Bukele solution' needed. The army took the biggest favelas in 2010, but it lasted only a few months and never happened again.
I can tell you how the problem started in Rio though. It started in the 80s with a left-wing politician called Brizola who made an informal deal with the gangsters along the lines of "the police won't go to the favelas if you don't take crime outside of it" and prohibited the police from going there. The gangs started arming themselves with more powerful weapons to fight each other, which didn't happen outside of Rio because of the existence of a single mafia previously mentioned, and then we got here, with favelas being literal fortress, having embrasures like in the third pic.
3. The problem here is not any bigger than in Europe or the USA. The state capitals have their share of drug addicts, but at the rest of the country it is not that big of a deal. The Rio gangsters make the majority of their profit by extorting "their" citizens (at least in the favelas they don't have to pay taxes or even for energy or gas as it is all stolen lol), stealing cargo, and assaulting banks. And the Primeiro Comando da Capital is more concerned with exporting drugs than selling them inside Brazil.
This whole situation I mentioned is exclusive to the state of Rio de Janeiro and a few other regions. In the majority of the country, drug dealing and general crime are controlled by a single mafia called Primeiro Comando da Capital, which has worldwide connections, most notably with the 'Ndrangheta, and is smarter and more lucrative than the combative gangsters of Rio de Janeiro. The PCC doesn't stimulate violence, as it is bad for business, and even helped to diminish it.
2. I don't know, honestly. It's easy to say that it is because of corrupt politicians, but the reality may be more complex than that. I think that because of left-wing politicians, gangsters are treated as victims, and because of that we don't have the 'Bukele solution' needed. The army took the biggest favelas in 2010, but it lasted only a few months and never happened again.
I can tell you how the problem started in Rio though. It started in the 80s with a left-wing politician called Brizola who made an informal deal with the gangsters along the lines of "the police won't go to the favelas if you don't take crime outside of it" and prohibited the police from going there. The gangs started arming themselves with more powerful weapons to fight each other, which didn't happen outside of Rio because of the existence of a single mafia previously mentioned, and then we got here, with favelas being literal fortress, having embrasures like in the third pic.
3. The problem here is not any bigger than in Europe or the USA. The state capitals have their share of drug addicts, but at the rest of the country it is not that big of a deal. The Rio gangsters make the majority of their profit by extorting "their" citizens (at least in the favelas they don't have to pay taxes or even for energy or gas as it is all stolen lol), stealing cargo, and assaulting banks. And the Primeiro Comando da Capital is more concerned with exporting drugs than selling them inside Brazil.
>>27621
Thank you for your reply. I'll read it when it's daylight in my hemisphere.
Not my post >>27622 (Del)
Thank you for your reply. I'll read it when it's daylight in my hemisphere.
Not my post >>27622 (Del)
>>27621
Read this with great interest, it gives me more insight into Brazil. If you're interested, my thoughts on it are as follows:
- I believe that as long as the cartels exist Brazil is very vulnerable to outside interference, especially from the US, and I'm almost 100% sure that they are taking advantage of this opportunity by providing access to weapons and money, intelligence, forming strings to pressure and control your country, in other words, Brazil's national security is breached.
- After the bankruptcy of the USSR, Russia in the 90's was a hellish miserable dump where literally all spheres of life degraded, enterprises and factories closed down, money stopped being paid, people lost food, supervisory bodies disappeared, cheap heavy drugs (and with them AIDS) from Afghanistan appeared, a mass of swindlers (for the naive Soviet mind), - all this became freely available and in huge quantities - the soil on which armed groups and total corruption instantly grew. Oligarchs seized power, in many cases illegally privatizing former Soviet property. Murders of businessmen, murders on the streets have become the norm. Two wars in Chechnya, one of which Russia lost and separatist sentiments in some regions of Russia - these were all realities of the 90s. And then Putin came.
- Putin came to power as a liberal politician, a follower of Yeltsin's ideology, who saw Russia as a democratic and moderately liberal country, he saw Russia as a member of the European Union and NATO. But when he took the president's chair and opened the first folder with documents, he realized that his ideas were more or less untenable. (He may have suspected this earlier, as director of the FSB, but now he is finally convinced of it). The next day, several oligarchs came to the Kremlin and informed him in a not very formal form that Putin was nobody here and if they wanted, then a more comfortable president would sit in this chair, so Vladimir Putin should cooperate with them. For Putin, this effectively became a declaration of war.
Putin destroyed everything that undermined Russia's stability: Russian Russian separatists and minority nationalists, armed groups of bandits, parallel corrupt government structures, Russian Nazis, Chechen terrorists supported by the United States, opposition parties sponsored from the United States, foreign agents, fugitive Russian spies abroad and oligarchs — some of them were imprisoned or killed, and he forbade those oligarchs who survived to participate in politics or finance political movements in any way, otherwise they would lose business by reviewing the results of privatization, in fact, he also made them an unwitting tool of the FSB to create economic confusion in the CIA's assessment of the Russian economy (by the way, this one of the reasons why Western sanctions against Russia failed, he used them to hide the real economy of Russia). He also took all the most important and critical enterprises into state ownership (for example, the Kalashnikov Concern, Rosatom, Roscosmos and many others).
At some point, he simply realized that certain liberal mechanisms would destroy the country under external or internal threats, none of the existing models of political governance suited Russia, so a completely new Putin system of power was born. As the Western media of those years called it: "Authoritarian democracy." High internal stability and external national security, yes, this has its limitations, but Russia has become a pretty decent country even in comparison with Western countries, including the United States. Russia is a very effective hybrid of right-wing and left-wing ideas.
Obviously, Brazil is also difficult, so I believe that Brazil does not need a left-wing or right-wing politician, Brazil needs a universal patriot who knows how to adapt to the realities of his state. In fact, creating a universal society in which everyone will be moderately comfortable.
Read this with great interest, it gives me more insight into Brazil. If you're interested, my thoughts on it are as follows:
- I believe that as long as the cartels exist Brazil is very vulnerable to outside interference, especially from the US, and I'm almost 100% sure that they are taking advantage of this opportunity by providing access to weapons and money, intelligence, forming strings to pressure and control your country, in other words, Brazil's national security is breached.
- After the bankruptcy of the USSR, Russia in the 90's was a hellish miserable dump where literally all spheres of life degraded, enterprises and factories closed down, money stopped being paid, people lost food, supervisory bodies disappeared, cheap heavy drugs (and with them AIDS) from Afghanistan appeared, a mass of swindlers (for the naive Soviet mind), - all this became freely available and in huge quantities - the soil on which armed groups and total corruption instantly grew. Oligarchs seized power, in many cases illegally privatizing former Soviet property. Murders of businessmen, murders on the streets have become the norm. Two wars in Chechnya, one of which Russia lost and separatist sentiments in some regions of Russia - these were all realities of the 90s. And then Putin came.
- Putin came to power as a liberal politician, a follower of Yeltsin's ideology, who saw Russia as a democratic and moderately liberal country, he saw Russia as a member of the European Union and NATO. But when he took the president's chair and opened the first folder with documents, he realized that his ideas were more or less untenable. (He may have suspected this earlier, as director of the FSB, but now he is finally convinced of it). The next day, several oligarchs came to the Kremlin and informed him in a not very formal form that Putin was nobody here and if they wanted, then a more comfortable president would sit in this chair, so Vladimir Putin should cooperate with them. For Putin, this effectively became a declaration of war.
Putin destroyed everything that undermined Russia's stability: Russian Russian separatists and minority nationalists, armed groups of bandits, parallel corrupt government structures, Russian Nazis, Chechen terrorists supported by the United States, opposition parties sponsored from the United States, foreign agents, fugitive Russian spies abroad and oligarchs — some of them were imprisoned or killed, and he forbade those oligarchs who survived to participate in politics or finance political movements in any way, otherwise they would lose business by reviewing the results of privatization, in fact, he also made them an unwitting tool of the FSB to create economic confusion in the CIA's assessment of the Russian economy (by the way, this one of the reasons why Western sanctions against Russia failed, he used them to hide the real economy of Russia). He also took all the most important and critical enterprises into state ownership (for example, the Kalashnikov Concern, Rosatom, Roscosmos and many others).
At some point, he simply realized that certain liberal mechanisms would destroy the country under external or internal threats, none of the existing models of political governance suited Russia, so a completely new Putin system of power was born. As the Western media of those years called it: "Authoritarian democracy." High internal stability and external national security, yes, this has its limitations, but Russia has become a pretty decent country even in comparison with Western countries, including the United States. Russia is a very effective hybrid of right-wing and left-wing ideas.
Obviously, Brazil is also difficult, so I believe that Brazil does not need a left-wing or right-wing politician, Brazil needs a universal patriot who knows how to adapt to the realities of his state. In fact, creating a universal society in which everyone will be moderately comfortable.
>>27621
Read this with great interest, it gives me more insight into Brazil. If you're interested, my thoughts on it are as follows:
- I believe that as long as the cartels exist Brazil is very vulnerable to outside interference, especially from the US, and I'm almost 100% sure that they are taking advantage of this opportunity by providing access to weapons and money, intelligence, forming strings to pressure and control your country, in other words, Brazil's national security is breached.
- After the bankruptcy of the USSR, Russia in the 90's was a hellish miserable dump where literally all spheres of life degraded, enterprises and factories closed down, money stopped being paid, people lost food, supervisory bodies disappeared, cheap heavy drugs (and with them AIDS) from Afghanistan appeared, a mass of swindlers (for the naive Soviet mind), - all this became freely available and in huge quantities - the soil on which armed groups and total corruption instantly grew. Oligarchs seized power, in many cases illegally privatizing former Soviet property. Murders of businessmen, murders on the streets have become the norm. Two wars in Chechnya, one of which Russia lost and separatist sentiments in some regions of Russia - these were all realities of the 90s. And then Putin came.
- Putin came to power as a liberal politician, a follower of Yeltsin's ideology, who saw Russia as a democratic and moderately liberal country, he saw Russia as a member of the European Union and NATO. But when he took the president's chair and opened the first folder with documents, he realized that his ideas were more or less untenable. (He may have suspected this earlier, as director of the FSB, but now he is finally convinced of it). The next day, several oligarchs came to the Kremlin and informed him in a not very formal form that Putin was nobody here and if they wanted, then a more comfortable president would sit in this chair, so Vladimir Putin should cooperate with them. For Putin, this effectively became a declaration of war.
Putin destroyed everything that undermined Russia's stability: Russian Russian separatists and minority nationalists, armed groups of bandits, parallel corrupt government structures, Russian Nazis, Chechen terrorists supported by the United States, opposition parties sponsored from the United States, foreign agents, fugitive Russian spies abroad and oligarchs — some of them were imprisoned or killed, and he forbade those oligarchs who survived to participate in politics or finance political movements in any way, otherwise they would lose business by reviewing the results of privatization, in fact, he also made them an unwitting tool of the FSB to create economic confusion in the CIA's assessment of the Russian economy (by the way, this one of the reasons why Western sanctions against Russia failed, he used them to hide the real economy of Russia). He also took all the most important and critical enterprises into state ownership (for example, the Kalashnikov Concern, Rosatom, Roscosmos and many others).
At some point, he simply realized that certain liberal mechanisms would destroy the country under external or internal threats, none of the existing models of political governance suited Russia, so a completely new Putin system of power was born. As the Western media of those years called it: "Authoritarian democracy." High internal stability and external national security, yes, this has its limitations, but Russia has become a pretty decent country even in comparison with Western countries, including the United States. Russia is a very effective hybrid of right-wing and left-wing ideas.
Obviously, Brazil is also difficult, so I believe that Brazil does not need a left-wing or right-wing politician, Brazil needs a universal patriot who knows how to adapt to the realities of his state. In fact, creating a universal society in which everyone will be moderately comfortable.
Read this with great interest, it gives me more insight into Brazil. If you're interested, my thoughts on it are as follows:
- I believe that as long as the cartels exist Brazil is very vulnerable to outside interference, especially from the US, and I'm almost 100% sure that they are taking advantage of this opportunity by providing access to weapons and money, intelligence, forming strings to pressure and control your country, in other words, Brazil's national security is breached.
- After the bankruptcy of the USSR, Russia in the 90's was a hellish miserable dump where literally all spheres of life degraded, enterprises and factories closed down, money stopped being paid, people lost food, supervisory bodies disappeared, cheap heavy drugs (and with them AIDS) from Afghanistan appeared, a mass of swindlers (for the naive Soviet mind), - all this became freely available and in huge quantities - the soil on which armed groups and total corruption instantly grew. Oligarchs seized power, in many cases illegally privatizing former Soviet property. Murders of businessmen, murders on the streets have become the norm. Two wars in Chechnya, one of which Russia lost and separatist sentiments in some regions of Russia - these were all realities of the 90s. And then Putin came.
- Putin came to power as a liberal politician, a follower of Yeltsin's ideology, who saw Russia as a democratic and moderately liberal country, he saw Russia as a member of the European Union and NATO. But when he took the president's chair and opened the first folder with documents, he realized that his ideas were more or less untenable. (He may have suspected this earlier, as director of the FSB, but now he is finally convinced of it). The next day, several oligarchs came to the Kremlin and informed him in a not very formal form that Putin was nobody here and if they wanted, then a more comfortable president would sit in this chair, so Vladimir Putin should cooperate with them. For Putin, this effectively became a declaration of war.
Putin destroyed everything that undermined Russia's stability: Russian Russian separatists and minority nationalists, armed groups of bandits, parallel corrupt government structures, Russian Nazis, Chechen terrorists supported by the United States, opposition parties sponsored from the United States, foreign agents, fugitive Russian spies abroad and oligarchs — some of them were imprisoned or killed, and he forbade those oligarchs who survived to participate in politics or finance political movements in any way, otherwise they would lose business by reviewing the results of privatization, in fact, he also made them an unwitting tool of the FSB to create economic confusion in the CIA's assessment of the Russian economy (by the way, this one of the reasons why Western sanctions against Russia failed, he used them to hide the real economy of Russia). He also took all the most important and critical enterprises into state ownership (for example, the Kalashnikov Concern, Rosatom, Roscosmos and many others).
At some point, he simply realized that certain liberal mechanisms would destroy the country under external or internal threats, none of the existing models of political governance suited Russia, so a completely new Putin system of power was born. As the Western media of those years called it: "Authoritarian democracy." High internal stability and external national security, yes, this has its limitations, but Russia has become a pretty decent country even in comparison with Western countries, including the United States. Russia is a very effective hybrid of right-wing and left-wing ideas.
Obviously, Brazil is also difficult, so I believe that Brazil does not need a left-wing or right-wing politician, Brazil needs a universal patriot who knows how to adapt to the realities of his state. In fact, creating a universal society in which everyone will be moderately comfortable.
5,3 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:14
720x1280, 0:14
liitle bitch
wauw, a video from my town, lel
6,6 Мб, mp4,
1024x576, 1:08
1024x576, 1:08
Ooooh...
The Portuguese poster will be thrilled with this story.
Another police violence scandal in the US: a black woman called the cops to report a burglar, the cops arrived, found no one and shot her themselves
The Portuguese poster will be thrilled with this story.
Another police violence scandal in the US: a black woman called the cops to report a burglar, the cops arrived, found no one and shot her themselves
>>27724
Then they should have just left the house, as it is private property, and written in the report - false call, as it is done in civilized countries.
Obviously the woman is scared and may think the cops are in cahoots with the intruders.
Then they should have just left the house, as it is private property, and written in the report - false call, as it is done in civilized countries.
Obviously the woman is scared and may think the cops are in cahoots with the intruders.
9,3 Мб, mp4,
1280x720, 0:28
1280x720, 0:28
A radio host was shot and robbed live on air in the southern Philippines
That music at the end...
That music at the end...
>>27725
she could 1) be on drugs, 2) fake complaint to escape domestic violence from her husband, etc or 3) maybe a hostage situation with the burglar threaten to kill her or one of her family. You must think in every scenario as a cop
she could 1) be on drugs, 2) fake complaint to escape domestic violence from her husband, etc or 3) maybe a hostage situation with the burglar threaten to kill her or one of her family. You must think in every scenario as a cop
>>27727
lol souce pls
lol souce pls
>>27725
>>27723
These things are not appropriate in Russia, because we are a different society, there are not a bunch of psychos and drug addicts walking freely on the street, there are no AK-74s freely available. The USA is a fundamentally different society, where this cruelty is necessary, it is a payment (or, rather, payback) for their model of society.
I hope I've made myself clear to you.
>>27723
These things are not appropriate in Russia, because we are a different society, there are not a bunch of psychos and drug addicts walking freely on the street, there are no AK-74s freely available. The USA is a fundamentally different society, where this cruelty is necessary, it is a payment (or, rather, payback) for their model of society.
I hope I've made myself clear to you.
128 Кб, 784x531
>>27771
Is this Russia at war or not? It's hard to believe. In medical certificates in such cases, in addition to the scientific definition and cause of death, they write the laconic ‘killed’.
Besides, the crime rate in Russia is not much higher than in Portugal.
https://www.numbeo.com/crime/rankings_by_country.jsp
Is this Russia at war or not? It's hard to believe. In medical certificates in such cases, in addition to the scientific definition and cause of death, they write the laconic ‘killed’.
Besides, the crime rate in Russia is not much higher than in Portugal.
https://www.numbeo.com/crime/rankings_by_country.jsp
>>27774
I don't where they got the data, therefore I brought now UN agency whose data is brought and supervised by their own member countries including Russia.
this is until 2021. Russia won in 2021 vs USA having a lower homicide rate per 100 000 people. no gay quantitative score from 1-5 I pushed before (page 74 - https://www.visionofhumanity.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/GPI-2024-web.pdf ). but USA is 13% naggers, I subjectively take that in account.
>"takes out account of Russian fatalities in extraordinary military op?"
I don't where they got the data, therefore I brought now UN agency whose data is brought and supervised by their own member countries including Russia.
this is until 2021. Russia won in 2021 vs USA having a lower homicide rate per 100 000 people. no gay quantitative score from 1-5 I pushed before (page 74 - https://www.visionofhumanity.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/GPI-2024-web.pdf ). but USA is 13% naggers, I subjectively take that in account.
>>27777
It's weird. I don't feel that in society. There are no live weapons here, no shootings, no gangs willing to do it, cops don't kill you because of a wrong move, they need to make an effort to seriously harm you.
I can only make an assumption about this though: not all countries honestly report their statistics. Especially those where political ratings depend on those statistics.
In 2020, the US didn't believe that any country other than the US\Europe could invent a cure for the coronavirus in a short time and accused Russia of hiding coronavirus victims, and someone (maybe even Lindsey Graham, who also claimed that Russia had no drug factories, lol, I don't remember exactly) offered a reward for any information about coronavirus victims in Russia. Essentially, they were attacking the Russian brand on behalf of European pharmaceutical corporations because Sputnik V was sent to Europe for certification for future shipments as the European situation worsened. But in the end it turned out that Sputnik V just worked well and everyone recognised it. And the US discredited itself. So I wouldn't trust US statistics. I think they certainly don't have Brazilian levels, but something very close.
Make a wish.
It's weird. I don't feel that in society. There are no live weapons here, no shootings, no gangs willing to do it, cops don't kill you because of a wrong move, they need to make an effort to seriously harm you.
I can only make an assumption about this though: not all countries honestly report their statistics. Especially those where political ratings depend on those statistics.
In 2020, the US didn't believe that any country other than the US\Europe could invent a cure for the coronavirus in a short time and accused Russia of hiding coronavirus victims, and someone (maybe even Lindsey Graham, who also claimed that Russia had no drug factories, lol, I don't remember exactly) offered a reward for any information about coronavirus victims in Russia. Essentially, they were attacking the Russian brand on behalf of European pharmaceutical corporations because Sputnik V was sent to Europe for certification for future shipments as the European situation worsened. But in the end it turned out that Sputnik V just worked well and everyone recognised it. And the US discredited itself. So I wouldn't trust US statistics. I think they certainly don't have Brazilian levels, but something very close.
>7777
Make a wish.
>>27848
Because it is /int/, silly
Because it is /int/, silly
2,5 Мб, mp4,
368x624, 0:28
368x624, 0:28
A Ukrainian prankster decided to taunt a Russian man in Spain. And this is what came out of it.
>>27893
Retard
Retard
>>27907
drone bombers were invented to solve that very problem
drone bombers were invented to solve that very problem
>>27907
The entirety of the Netherlands is mostly migrants
The entirety of the Netherlands is mostly migrants
>>27907
ya bi ei prisunul =)
ya bi ei prisunul =)
>>27762
KEK. Are we from the same country? Fucking bot.
Police brutality aside, the officer in that video was justified in shooting a woman, because she was a nigger.
>we are a different society, there are not a bunch of psychos and drug addicts walking freely on the street
KEK. Are we from the same country? Fucking bot.
Police brutality aside, the officer in that video was justified in shooting a woman, because she was a nigger.
3,7 Мб, mp4,
576x768, 0:18861 Кб, mp4,
854x556, 0:0712,6 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:474,4 Мб, webm,
480x360, 0:21
576x768, 0:18861 Кб, mp4,
854x556, 0:0712,6 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:474,4 Мб, webm,
480x360, 0:21
>>28533
I feel so bad for the pretty boy. Btw, we need to go to all the places and tell foreigners they can post here again.
I feel so bad for the pretty boy. Btw, we need to go to all the places and tell foreigners they can post here again.
>>28837
Now for this kind of plot director would sit in jail. Transgender and faggotnes propaganda between teens, it is ouatrageous.
Now for this kind of plot director would sit in jail. Transgender and faggotnes propaganda between teens, it is ouatrageous.
>>28841
He did time for pedophilia, lol :D
He did time for pedophilia, lol :D
57 Кб, 845x307
>>28862
mental illness. could be https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%9E%D1%81%D1%82%D1%80%D1%8B%D0%B5_%D0%B8_%D1%82%D1%80%D0%B0%D0%BD%D0%B7%D0%B8%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%BD%D1%8B%D0%B5_%D0%BF%D1%81%D0%B8%D1%85%D0%BE%D1%82%D0%B8%D1%87%D0%B5%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B8%D0%B5_%D1%80%D0%B0%D1%81%D1%81%D1%82%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%B9%D1%81%D1%82%D0%B2%D0%B0 |
mental illness. could be https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%9E%D1%81%D1%82%D1%80%D1%8B%D0%B5_%D0%B8_%D1%82%D1%80%D0%B0%D0%BD%D0%B7%D0%B8%D1%82%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%BD%D1%8B%D0%B5_%D0%BF%D1%81%D0%B8%D1%85%D0%BE%D1%82%D0%B8%D1%87%D0%B5%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B8%D0%B5_%D1%80%D0%B0%D1%81%D1%81%D1%82%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%B9%D1%81%D1%82%D0%B2%D0%B0 |
8,3 Мб, mp4,
640x360, 1:41
640x360, 1:41
>>28886
How easy and unexpected it is to lose touch with reality just because the assholinium molecule in your brain has entered the interaction phase with the pidorphine receptor. Interesting, thanks for the Russian link.
How easy and unexpected it is to lose touch with reality just because the assholinium molecule in your brain has entered the interaction phase with the pidorphine receptor. Interesting, thanks for the Russian link.
>>29170
Hahahaha, happens, bruh.
Hahahaha, happens, bruh.
>>23965
puxa devo se transportar no brasil AGORA
puxa devo se transportar no brasil AGORA
7 Кб, 256x197
>>24462
jeitinho brasileiro mano
jeitinho brasileiro mano
>>27621
I wish brazil never imported niggers tbh
i like your language but the county is an absolute shithole except for towns in the south
I wish brazil never imported niggers tbh
i like your language but the county is an absolute shithole except for towns in the south
5,5 Мб, mp4,
640x272, 2:065 Мб, webm,
1280x720, 0:191,6 Мб, mp4,
390x480, 0:215,6 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:59
640x272, 2:065 Мб, webm,
1280x720, 0:191,6 Мб, mp4,
390x480, 0:215,6 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:59
>>29242
And who would've work in the plantations, genuis ?
And who would've work in the plantations, genuis ?
10,4 Мб, mp4,
540x960, 0:583,9 Мб, webm,
720x720, 0:413 Мб, mp4,
460x816, 0:24700 Кб, mp4,
336x444, 0:05
540x960, 0:583,9 Мб, webm,
720x720, 0:413 Мб, mp4,
460x816, 0:24700 Кб, mp4,
336x444, 0:05
Feel free to post stuff.
>>29440
Don't be a bigot, it's funny even when it's about your people.
Don't be a bigot, it's funny even when it's about your people.
>>29837
Ok. Now, how can I unsee this? There surely have to be a way. Please, anyone?!
Ok. Now, how can I unsee this? There surely have to be a way. Please, anyone?!
Test
>>30156
Lol, Ridley, you should consult historians and historical records, couse otherwise your movies is nothing but an old man pulling shit out his ass. How many times you need to fall flat on your face to realize you just not good enough to pull it off successfully ? And why focus on Napoleon? Let's focus on how you failed with Blade Runner. It only had one book to consult.
Lol, Ridley, you should consult historians and historical records, couse otherwise your movies is nothing but an old man pulling shit out his ass. How many times you need to fall flat on your face to realize you just not good enough to pull it off successfully ? And why focus on Napoleon? Let's focus on how you failed with Blade Runner. It only had one book to consult.
>>30175
Fuck u, dude. How de fuck I'm suppose to know ?
Fuck u, dude. How de fuck I'm suppose to know ?
>>30386
The worst of their videos. And the other one, do you really enjoy that? What's that about?
The worst of their videos. And the other one, do you really enjoy that? What's that about?
>>30389
The track is good. They have worse videos.
Ugandan Knuckles, sick with Ebola in an eternal search for their queen who will show them the way - Old-school VRСhat meme.
>The worst of their videos
The track is good. They have worse videos.
>And the other one
Ugandan Knuckles, sick with Ebola in an eternal search for their queen who will show them the way - Old-school VRСhat meme.
27,6 Мб, mp4,
1280x720, 3:421,6 Мб, webm,
640x360, 1:106 Мб, webm,
640x360, 2:562,6 Мб, webm,
630x360, 2:20
1280x720, 3:421,6 Мб, webm,
640x360, 1:106 Мб, webm,
640x360, 2:562,6 Мб, webm,
630x360, 2:20
>>30392
They have way better videos though.
They have way better videos though.
>>17377 (OP)
youtube doesn't detect well to translate Angela Merkel's speech. fucked up
youtube doesn't detect well to translate Angela Merkel's speech. fucked up
7,9 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:25
720x1280, 0:25
>>30446
it's all clear to me without translation
it's all clear to me without translation
Portugal womans: nothig
Portugal mans: Echoman-man-man-man-man
Portugal mans: Echoman-man-man-man-man
>>30462
Dolby-Digital-Man
Dolby-Digital-Man
>>30462
He's from Madeira island like Cristiano Ronaldo.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzXABkiEOhc
https://youtu.be/vRX9kkt1Mlk?si=ooL_VX3AJfyEajmO&t=112
He's from Madeira island like Cristiano Ronaldo.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzXABkiEOhc
https://youtu.be/vRX9kkt1Mlk?si=ooL_VX3AJfyEajmO&t=112
>>30605
good music.
good music.
3,1 Мб, mp4,
1280x720, 0:35
1280x720, 0:35
ULTRA FUCKING BASED
3,9 Мб, webm,
576x1024, 0:23
576x1024, 0:23
This is what Vladimir Putin saved me from
2,5 Мб, mp4,
854x480, 0:46
854x480, 0:46
This is what Vladimir Putin saved me from
8,2 Мб, mp4,
576x1024, 0:36
576x1024, 0:36
This is what Vladimir Putin saved me from
>>30756
The Christianity of the future
Lel
Btw, Russia is very strict about this. The bells are always visible to everyone and must necessarily be struck by the living rector of the church. Whether this is a general Orthodox rule or just a Russian rule, I don't know.
The Christianity of the future
Lel
Btw, Russia is very strict about this. The bells are always visible to everyone and must necessarily be struck by the living rector of the church. Whether this is a general Orthodox rule or just a Russian rule, I don't know.
>>31069
Just for lulz
Just for lulz
>>31148
That guy crashed his car with a child (handicapped according to some) inside his car.
That guy crashed his car with a child (handicapped according to some) inside his car.
13,8 Мб, mp4,
640x352, 2:399,4 Мб, mp4,
1280x720, 0:251,4 Мб, mp4,
480x852, 0:1413,3 Мб, mp4,
1280x720, 0:36
640x352, 2:399,4 Мб, mp4,
1280x720, 0:251,4 Мб, mp4,
480x852, 0:1413,3 Мб, mp4,
1280x720, 0:36
Nothing political, just cool
875 Кб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:071,8 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:091,2 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:073,6 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:22
720x1280, 0:071,8 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:091,2 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:073,6 Мб, mp4,
720x1280, 0:22
1. https://app.prntscr.com/ru/download.html (PrintScr, CTRL+C)
2. https://translate.yandex.ru/ocr (CTRL+V)
3. Dpøчitь - jerk off (kind of censored), full text: "it's uncomfortable to jerk off on the ceiling" (kind of sarcasm)
2. https://translate.yandex.ru/ocr (CTRL+V)
3. Dpøчitь - jerk off (kind of censored), full text: "it's uncomfortable to jerk off on the ceiling" (kind of sarcasm)
8,5 Мб, mp4,
640x358, 2:18
640x358, 2:18
Beginning of a final episode from a Portuguese soap opera /"telenovela"
21,4 Мб, webm,
1280x720, 3:17
1280x720, 3:17
>>31922
LMAO, masterpiece. I love movie content for internal consumption:)
LMAO, masterpiece. I love movie content for internal consumption:)
>>31922
I wish you would give some sort of the context here, couse I'm at a loss.
I wish you would give some sort of the context here, couse I'm at a loss.