The man who plays the little dictator, former KGB mobster Vladimir Putin, has just shown us the respect he has for international order and harmony between nations, trampling on the most basic rights of Ukrainians. His obvious goal is to become the owner of the country and place his straw men in Kiev. In the first months of the crisis, the European left told us that Putin would not become another Stalin, that the danger lay in NATO's action aimed at accepting the entry of the Eastern European country into the Alliance.
But in reality his ambitions were more than anticipated by the left, which now recognizes an irresponsible dictator, as the French politician, Jean Luc Melenchon, a friend of Cuba and even today of Putin, has done. The French communist party itself, although it has become a specter of what it was, has also been associated with the protest shown by the civilized world.
The first action that should be taken today by Western countries would be the closure of the Goebbelisian chain RT to the salary of the Kremlin, which floods us with excuses and justifications of the worst kind. It is not possible for this fascist chain to continue to function and blatantly lie to us.
When the dictator assaults a neighbor, he bombards him and tells us that he is trying to “denazify” Ukraine, not only does he blatantly lie to us, but he shows us the mood in which his neurons work.
In his opposition to Putin, President Joe Biden has shown signs of weakness, stating from the start that he would let the Russian take over Ukraine and that not a single NATO soldier would stand up to the invasion. Of course, nobody wants a nuclear war, and Putin, faced with that danger, would not have acted as he is doing. The Atlantic Alliance could intervene to the same extent that Putin does, why not?
Strength sometimes has to be measured by strength.
It is now necessary that the countries that condemn the invasion of Ukraine establish retaliatory measures that are consistent with the aggression; that they do not limit themselves to cutting their relations with a range of Russian banks or close the borders to a group of oligarchs friendly to the dictator. We must respond with the importance that Putin's action deserves. Russian gas must be replaced by gas from other suppliers; Russian diplomatic personnel (known as spies in disguise) must be expelled, and relations with the Russian plantigrade must be reduced to a minimum. It is what the honor of the West claims.
(Manuel Ostos)
But in reality his ambitions were more than anticipated by the left, which now recognizes an irresponsible dictator, as the French politician, Jean Luc Melenchon, a friend of Cuba and even today of Putin, has done. The French communist party itself, although it has become a specter of what it was, has also been associated with the protest shown by the civilized world.
The first action that should be taken today by Western countries would be the closure of the Goebbelisian chain RT to the salary of the Kremlin, which floods us with excuses and justifications of the worst kind. It is not possible for this fascist chain to continue to function and blatantly lie to us.
When the dictator assaults a neighbor, he bombards him and tells us that he is trying to “denazify” Ukraine, not only does he blatantly lie to us, but he shows us the mood in which his neurons work.
In his opposition to Putin, President Joe Biden has shown signs of weakness, stating from the start that he would let the Russian take over Ukraine and that not a single NATO soldier would stand up to the invasion. Of course, nobody wants a nuclear war, and Putin, faced with that danger, would not have acted as he is doing. The Atlantic Alliance could intervene to the same extent that Putin does, why not?
Strength sometimes has to be measured by strength.
It is now necessary that the countries that condemn the invasion of Ukraine establish retaliatory measures that are consistent with the aggression; that they do not limit themselves to cutting their relations with a range of Russian banks or close the borders to a group of oligarchs friendly to the dictator. We must respond with the importance that Putin's action deserves. Russian gas must be replaced by gas from other suppliers; Russian diplomatic personnel (known as spies in disguise) must be expelled, and relations with the Russian plantigrade must be reduced to a minimum. It is what the honor of the West claims.
(Manuel Ostos)
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