Kaks FAFO tarinaa on viime päivinä tullu esiin.
Eka
Eli. Yhdysvaltain armeijan alipuseeri pari vuotta seurustelu venäläisen naisen kanssa. Molemmat eli Etelä-Koreassa siihen aikaan ja tää nainen kutsu välillä tätä yhdysvaltalaista aviomiehekseen, välillä taas haukku tyypillisellä amerikkalaisia tarkoittavalla haukkumasanalla. Tämä alipupseeri on muuten täysin Magamies, eli tykkää Venäjästä. No nää kuitenkin eros toisistaan ja mies meni sitten ilman armeijan lupaa Venäjälle korjaamaan asioita. Joutui pidätetyksi ja nyt on sellissä siel. Miehen asemapaikkan siis oli Etelä-Korea ja muija oli kai tanssimassa siellä klubeilla.
Eka
Eli. Yhdysvaltain armeijan alipuseeri pari vuotta seurustelu venäläisen naisen kanssa. Molemmat eli Etelä-Koreassa siihen aikaan ja tää nainen kutsu välillä tätä yhdysvaltalaista aviomiehekseen, välillä taas haukku tyypillisellä amerikkalaisia tarkoittavalla haukkumasanalla. Tämä alipupseeri on muuten täysin Magamies, eli tykkää Venäjästä. No nää kuitenkin eros toisistaan ja mies meni sitten ilman armeijan lupaa Venäjälle korjaamaan asioita. Joutui pidätetyksi ja nyt on sellissä siel. Miehen asemapaikkan siis oli Etelä-Korea ja muija oli kai tanssimassa siellä klubeilla.
Toinen. Hersonilainen petturi. Pakeni siis Venäjälle kun Herson vapautettiin. Valittelee nyt kun Hersonissa oli kaikki paremmin ja Venäjällä ei ole mitään vapauksia ja mikään ei toimi(kaikki kai järjestyy edelleen vanhan totuuden mukaan). Jos olisi kyky mennä ajassa taaksepäin niin palaisi.An American military man arrested in Russia was detained following a complaint from his girlfriend about theft and beating. She posted it on Tiktok, where she affectionately called him “my pindos”Details of the relationship between US Army soldier Gordon Black, arrested in Vladivostok, and his girlfriend Alexandra Vashchuk, whom Black came to visit from South Korea, have surfaced. Vashchuk complained about Black to the police - the American allegedly stole 200 thousand rubles from her and beat her, writes the SHOT channel. Black is charged with theft causing significant damage (clause “c” of Part 2 of Article 158 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation), this article threatens imprisonment for up to five years.Radio Liberty journalists found Vashchuk’s accounts on social networks, where the girl said that she had lived in South Korea for five years. There they met Sergeant Black. How exactly is unknown, but the American has appeared in Vashchuk’s videos since at least 2021. In some videos, she ironically calls Black her husband. In another video - “Pindos”.Black's mother Melody Jones told American media that her son flew to Vladivostok specifically to meet with Vashchuk. The military man wanted to make peace with the girl after a quarrel. She was deported from South Korea, so Black had to go to Russia.The Agency notes that Black is not the first person Vashchuk reported to the police. Journalists found information about Vashchuk’s statements in leaks: in 2009 and 2015, the girl complained to the police about her mother - about death threats and beatings. In 2016, Waschuk reported to the police that her neighbor crashed his car into another car in the yard of the house.The circumstances of combat instructor Black's trip to the Russian Federation are currently being investigated by the US Army. He decided to go to Russia on his own, taking advantage of the redeployment from Korea to Texas and despite the ban on such trips.How STUPID do you have to be to go to russia?
A COLLABORATOR FROM KHERSON WHINES ABOUT HOW MISERABLE HER 'NEW LIFE' IN RUSSIA IS...
...and about how she wishes she could come back.
Here's a long drink of v@tnik tears, for you #NAFO fellas!
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So, here's a collaborator from Kherson - I'm not going to name her, because I don't want to give her additional publicity. But she escaped to russia with other collaborators when Kherson was liberated.
And now here, below, you can hear her describing her new life in russia.
I can't be troubled with translating FORTY MINUTES OF WHINING, but I'll give you the highlights.
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Most important of all, she says that...
She wants very much to come back (this is at 21:35 in the video), and if there was a chance to reverse time, then she would wish that the SVO never started.
She knows that people in russia will say that she is ungrateful, and that she was given 'this and that', but its not their life that was shaken 'like this' (she makes actions), it was her life.
She says further that in russia you can't even talk about problems (now that's a surprise ) - everyone is forced to say, 'Everything is fine, everything is fine.'
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The rest of the video is basically about how much more miserable and inconvenient life is in russia. Here are some excerpts, below:
She whines that...
In Kherson they were not rich people, but in russia they are like beggars.
In Kherson there was a big house, a big garden, summer house, a garage - and in russia they have none of these things.
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More areas in which she says russia does not compare with Ukraine...
Tools and appliances:
In Ukraine, she had all sorts of tools and appliances - screwdrivers, a glue gun, juicers - and in russia there is nothing.
In russia, you can't get anything in local stores, and when you buy online in shops like Ozone and Wildberries everything is very expensive - very much more so than she remembers from when she was in Ukraine.
Public transport:
She used to live on the outskirts of Kherson, and the transport system was good, but in russia they live far from the city and the transport is horrible.
You have to spend the whole day if you plan to go anywhere. The bus only comes once or twice in the day, so you wait for it, and so going anywhere takes your whole day.
Food:
In Ukraine she knew in which cafe to eat 'in order to feel good' (her exact words), and in russia she buys something to eat and it's so uninspiring that she falls asleep over it, and life in general is so uninspiring that she can't think properly.
Computer chairs (!) - yes, she's really whining about computer chairs:
In Kherson you can go to the city and buy any computer chair you like and every model is available, of every sort.
And in russia you go to a shop, and you have a choice between two models of chairs. That's it. Of course it's not like that in Moscow and St. Petersburg, but it's like that in her city.
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And she says that she'll never have all the comforts again that she had in Ukraine...
...the sofas, the cupboards, the sports equipment (her exact words).
Things just cost too much and she earns too little. She would have to scrimp and save for years to attain even an echo of her lifestyle in Ukraine.
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A personal note:
On a personal level, I find her manner of speaking and expressions VERY irritating. It took will to listen to her for forty minutes.
I trust people here will appreciate my sacrifices in bringing you this 'cheerful' message from inside russia.
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