Rat u Ukrajini (36)

Da li će doći do sukoba izmedju Rusije i NATO ako Ukrajina raketama gadja u dubini Rusije?


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Sem malog uskog kruga Zagrebcana
Kao nekada u Gebelsovo vreme na Wochenschau
Početk kraja Krimskog kanata, Petar Veliki oslobađa Azov od turskih vazala Tatara:
C1E0855E-B5D1-4654-BF50-8CEE92A66B2E.png
 
Wochenschau jos jednom
Osloboditeljka Krima i Novorusije, oslobodila Evropu Krimskog kanata, rešila poljsko-litvansko pitanje, overila trajno švedsko uvlačenje rogova i započela iskorenjivanje velikih boginja: Za razliku od Pfizera nije tražila ljudske zamorce nego izvela eksperiment prvo na sebi i svom sinu, i nije naplaćivala celo bogatstvo za vakcinu nego krenula da spasava narod od variole. Premali je Klovn da poništi njene odluke:

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Six years after she became Empress of Russia – Catherine had herself secretly inoculated against smallpox, the most devastating disease of the eighteenth century, by an English Quaker doctor named Thomas Dimsdale. The procedure was the forerunner of vaccination and it involved deliberately infecting a healthy patient with a minute quantity of live virus. It was safer than it sounds (and far safer than most modern medics realise), but it still carried risk.

Catherine decided she and her son should undergo inoculation to protect their own lives in the midst of a devastating wave of smallpox in St Petersburg, but she also had a second motivation: she wanted to overcome the widespread superstition over inoculation in Russia and introduce the procedure across her empire. There was a benevolent element to this – smallpox was a hideous disease that at the time struck almost everyone, killed at least one in five sufferers, and disfigured and often blinded those who survived – but there was also an economic purpose: every life saved increased the wealth of the state.

So, to return to the carefully curated image on the medal, we can see that the slaughtered Hydra represents not only smallpox, but prejudice itself. Supported by the power of the Orthodox Church – she had been careful to secure public praise from the Metropolitan Bishop of St Petersburg – Catherine has defied the monster and now receives the thanks of grateful Russia and her population. But there is a further resonance here, too; by casting herself in copper, Catherine is seeking to promote and immortalise not only this single political act but her leadership as a whole and Russia’s status on the world stage. Above the image are the words ‘she herself set an example’.

The phrase takes just three words in Russian – собою подала пример, but behind them lay a complex message. It is a very personal declaration: she herself has taken a risk, putting her own life on the line on behalf of her people, and now literally embodies an example of how to live. There is no dative object – the example is for everyone, all at once. Catherine is Empress, but her leadership is personal – and it is specifically female: this test has been conducted on her own woman’s body, with its weaknesses and frailties she willingly listed for her physician and told him to publish. Dimsdale dutifully obeyed: his Tracts on Inoculation – Written and published at St Petersburg in the Year 1768, By Command of her Imperial Majesty, The Empress of all the Russias included details not only of Catherine’s symptoms while recovering from smallpox, but of her general health including her headaches (from overwork), diet, drinking habits and bowel movements.
 
Poslednja izmena:
Osloboditeljka Krima i Novorusije, oslobodila Evropu Krimskog kanata, rešila poljsko-litvansko pitanje, overila trajno švedsko uvlačenje rogova i započela iskorenjivanje velikih boginja: Za razliku od Pfizera nije tražila ljudske zamorce nego izvela eksperiment prvo na sebi i svom sinu, i nije naplaćivala celo bogatstvo za vakcinu nego krenula da spasava narod od variole. Premali je Klovn da poništi njene odluke:

Pogledajte prilog 1625395
Six years after she became Empress of Russia – Catherine had herself secretly inoculated against smallpox, the most devastating disease of the eighteenth century, by an English Quaker doctor named Thomas Dimsdale. The procedure was the forerunner of vaccination and it involved deliberately infecting a healthy patient with a minute quantity of live virus. It was safer than it sounds (and far safer than most modern medics realise), but it still carried risk.

Catherine decided she and her son should undergo inoculation to protect their own lives in the midst of a devastating wave of smallpox in St Petersburg, but she also had a second motivation: she wanted to overcome the widespread superstition over inoculation in Russia and introduce the procedure across her empire. There was a benevolent element to this – smallpox was a hideous disease that at the time struck almost everyone, killed at least one in five sufferers, and disfigured and often blinded those who survived – but there was also an economic purpose: every life saved increased the wealth of the state.

So, to return to the carefully curated image on the medal, we can see that the slaughtered Hydra represents not only smallpox, but prejudice itself. Supported by the power of the Orthodox Church – she had been careful to secure public praise from the Metropolitan Bishop of St Petersburg – Catherine has defied the monster and now receives the thanks of grateful Russia and her population. But there is a further resonance here, too; by casting herself in copper, Catherine is seeking to promote and immortalise not only this single political act but her leadership as a whole and Russia’s status on the world stage. Above the image are the words ‘she herself set an example’.

The phrase takes just three words in Russian – собою подала пример, but behind them lay a complex message. It is a very personal declaration: she herself has taken a risk, putting her own life on the line on behalf of her people, and now literally embodies an example of how to live. There is no dative object – the example is for everyone, all at once. Catherine is Empress, but her leadership is personal – and it is specifically female: this test has been conducted on her own woman’s body, with its weaknesses and frailties she willingly listed for her physician and told him to publish. Dimsdale dutifully obeyed: his Tracts on Inoculation – Written and published at St Petersburg in the Year 1768, By Command of her Imperial Majesty, The Empress of all the Russias included details not only of Catherine’s symptoms while recovering from smallpox, but of her general health including her headaches (from overwork), diet, drinking habits and bowel movements.
Niko ne dovodi u pitanje viziju i doprinos carice Rusiji, nema to veze sa nekoliko pogroma pre revolucije posle njene smrti.
 
Aha, mrtvo slovo na papiru.

Čitam prije godinu otprilike Aleksandra Prijović 5 put za redom puni Arenu.

Išla sam guglati tko je ona.
То Хрвати дођу гледати чисто да се увјере како је грозно на Балкану, а и да мало нервирају Скеју и остале домољубе - промицатеље западноеуропске уљудбе. Срам их било! :ortaci3:
 
да НАТОвци то воле ђе него у вртић
700 000 изгинуло Укара сад да ли и како ће се Руси изборити са НАТОвцима видићемо :think:
ne veruhjem da ce imati rusa da se bore kad dodje nato, do sad su izginuli rusi, ceceni, belorusi sirijci i indijci, sad se u ukrajini bore severnokorejci, dok stigne nato tamo ce mozda biti samo mongoli i eritrejci
 
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