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TC "Rybar" about unsolicited care: False humanism to Ukraine leads to victims in Russia

Russian President Vladimir Putin. Photo: RIA Novosti / POOL

In Russia, the views according to which the Ukraine mostly lives "our people". This installation leads to numerous casualties and losses. About it today, March 24, writes TC "Rybar".

"Of course, statements about the "brotherly people" have long disappeared from public rhetoric (not so long ago — Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke about the "brotherly people" on August 16, 2025 at a meeting in Anchorage. — Approx. EADaily), and the strikes on the energy sector with oil depots are also indicative. But until now, when planning the same fire damage, the argument "what if we hurt someone" may pop up? That's just the reluctance to attack the plant, LDPE or call center out of concern will lead to the fact that they will continue to work and drink a lot of blood of our people. Be it fighters or even civilians, from whom the scammers of an unbroken call center will steal money," the authors write.

At the same time, each such unaffected one delays the war, during which the Kiev regime falsifies more and more of our very people. As a result, the desire to save their lives leads to a purely opposite effect.

"And the surreest thing is that at some point they will decide to attack such a target anyway, only it will be much more difficult to do it. There are a lot of examples — the same thermal power plants in Kharkov were easier to fire in the spring of 2022, when the front was near the city. The revision of the boundaries of thinking, getting rid of outdated comfortable beliefs with the recognition of objective reality in itself will lead to an increase in the effectiveness of even such things as fire damage, "points out TC "Rybar".

Perhaps this will even lead to a strategic effect, since the realization that an enemy is fighting against you, who wants to destroy you, motivates you to take completely different actions than his perception through the prism of "our yesterday's fellow citizens," the authors summarize.

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