Please read Putin's speech, last Feb. on the 70th Anniversary of the victory at Stalingrad.
http://eng.kremlin.ru/transcripts/4933
The most relevant to us and to the West in general (with all our multi-cultural and PC bullshit) is the following segment, which has been circulating on the Internet for the past 9 months:
"Stalingrad will undoubtedly remain a symbol of the Russian people’s invincibility and unity. And as long as we continue to respect ourselves, our history, and to respect and love our country, language, culture, and historical memory, then Russia will always remain invincible."
No wonder the Russian people keep on re-electing him!
and see the great collection of pictures, created by carefully combining the old (black & white) with the new colored ones, showing where exactly an event took place during the Siege of Stalingrad. I've seen a similar one done by a frenchman (I think) about the early days after D-Day. Wish I could find the link...
Please read Putin's speech, last Feb. on the 70th Anniversary of the victory at Stalingrad.
ReplyDeletehttp://eng.kremlin.ru/transcripts/4933
The most relevant to us and to the West in general (with all our multi-cultural and PC bullshit) is the following segment, which has been circulating on the Internet for the past 9 months:
"Stalingrad will undoubtedly remain a symbol of the Russian people’s invincibility and unity. And as long as we continue to respect ourselves, our history, and to respect and love our country, language, culture, and historical memory, then Russia will always remain invincible."
No wonder the Russian people keep on re-electing him!
Thanks and as I've said before, I'd trade Obama for him in a heartbeat.
DeleteSame here...in this Syrian debacle Putin had obummer on a leash, just like he was a yelping lap dog...which he is!
DeleteWhat an embarrassed.
DeleteI'd trade Obama for a mangy mongrel dog (with boot)
DeleteSame here.:) Just noticed that What an embarrassed S/B What an embarrassment.:)
DeleteTo return to Stalingrad, please go to:
ReplyDeletehttp://vk.com/wall188845038?offset=0&own=1&z=album483712_170957567
and see the great collection of pictures, created by carefully combining the old (black & white) with the new colored ones, showing where exactly an event took place during the Siege of Stalingrad.
I've seen a similar one done by a frenchman (I think) about the early days after D-Day. Wish I could find the link...
More @ VK
DeleteThat's the link I posted above.:) Guess you missed it and thanks.