Russian Presidential Elections

Who will win the Russian Presidential Elections

  • Putin

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Putin

    Votes: 3 23.1%
  • Putin

    Votes: 1 7.7%
  • On Planet X, we all vote for Putin

    Votes: 9 69.2%

  • Total voters
    13
  • Poll closed .
Today it was also revealed what Putin discussed with Melania while sitting next to her at the G20 meeting In Hamburg. According to him, it is what we all expected: Maternity benefits in Russia (which are yuuge), Kamchatka bears, Siberian tigers and the joys of fishing (all yuuge as well). He boasted a little bit, he says, but he didn't try to recruit her.
 
How the Russian Presidential Election Race Looks in its Final Days

Gilbert Doctorow said:
The candidates for the presidency in Russia’s election this Sunday are now in the home stretch. Not much has changed in the past several weeks as regards the standings of each in the polls of voter sympathies. Vladimir Putin holds the lead, way out in front, with nearly 70% of voters saying they will cast their votes for him. The candidate of the Communist Party, Pavel Grudinin, has held on to second place, at just over 7% despite suffering some severe setbacks over revelations of his bank accounts held abroad. And third place, with just over 5% goes to the nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky of the LDPR.

Liberal candidate, Ksenia Sobchak, who positioned herself to catch the protest vote “against all,” has about 1.5%. The remaining four candidates – Sergei Baburin, Maxim Suraikin on the Communist Left and Boris Titov, Grigory Yavlinsky on the Liberal Right – have fractions of one percent of the electorate committed to them.

Candidate Putin appears on track to achieve the 70:70 target that his campaign team set for him, meaning a turnout on election day of 70% of the electorate, of which 70% vote for Putin. Such results would support a claim to popular validation of his domestic and foreign programs for the coming six years. It would give him a free hand for substantial reworking of the cabinet, which, rumor says, may come in the days immediately ahead.

However, the campaign is about process as much as it is about results, and at that level there is a great deal which merits consideration because of what this electoral campaign says about the condition of Russian democracy today and where the country is headed. [...]
 
One of the two Putin-hugging documentaries Doctorow mentions, "World Order 2018", has already been English-subtitled (by Inessa S again). Youtube is so afraid of it that it was immediately removed "for violating YouTube's policy on spam, deceptive practices, and scams." :rolleyes:

To stream and download on vimeo.

If you wish to spend your time watching stupid, idiotic, lying, pro-Putin propaganda, then you are quite welcome to do so.

I, however, can think of several other things that I would rather be doing than watching stupid, idiotic, lying pro-Putin propaganda.
 
Did I make the impression that I was asking for your permission?

Nope! Not at all.

I was just saying that if you wish to use your time to review stupid, idiotic, lying pro-Putin propaganda then you are welcome do so.

As for me, however, I (and quite a few other people) will be avoiding the stupid, idiotic, lying, pro-Putin propaganda.

Does that clarify things for you?
 
I am still amused that somebody who has far left..by any standards...political views is a defender of people like Putin,Milosevic,and Trump....
 
Nope! Not at all.

I was just saying that if you wish to use your time to review stupid, idiotic, lying pro-Putin propaganda then you are welcome do so.

As for me, however, I (and quite a few other people) will be avoiding the stupid, idiotic, lying, pro-Putin propaganda.

Does that clarify things for you?


No, I still fail to see why you felt the urge to let me know that I am "welcome" in your mind to do something you have no ability to tolerateWP anyway.
 
No, I still fail to see why you felt the urge to let me know that I am "welcome" in your mind to do something you have no ability to tolerateWP anyway.

Well, if you are vexed about the meaning of the world "welcome", then I just consulted my dictionary, and here is what I found:

Welcome: To receive kindly and hospitably

I hope that clarifies things for you.
 
Blessed are the cheesemakers

Last Friday, Dutch current affairs program "EenVandaag" had an item on Mr. Oleg Sirota.

Here's a short clip on Twitter.

For those who don't know Russian or Dutch the summary:
Oleg's ancestors had been dairy farmers. That changed with the Russian Revolution and the subsequent collectivization. Oleg himself had been a software developer. But when Putin announced counter-sanctions against the EU, in August 2014, he dropped out of ICT to pursue his lifelong dream: to become a cheesemaker. Likewise, his mom quit her lifelong job at a children's hospital to sell the cheese in their little shop. He proudly presents his own version of "Bergkäse", which he hopes Putin will come and taste and will make him remember of his days in Dresden.

Blessed are the cheesemakers who cannot compete on quality or price but only survive due to lack of competition.
 
Blessed are the cheesemakers who cannot compete on quality or price but only survive due to lack of competition.


Well, there's a Russian supermarket in town where I go every two or three months to buy a couple of products (Ukrop paste f.e. ;)). Some years ago they had next to no cheese. By now that has indeed exploded, I noticed. Cheese is still nothing you go to a Russian supermarket for, because it's not typical and isn't consumed (and hence not produced) very much, but the domestic Russian cheese market (among many others) certainly has profited from the sanctions.
 

Back
Top Bottom