William Browder was banned from entering Russia back in 2005, and later he was sentenced in absentia for nine years on charges of tax evasion. After that, he began lobbying for the Magnitsky Act in the US Congress and achieved his goal — the law was adopted in 2012, which became the first US sanctions against Russia in recent history.
In a conversation with our "Poroshenko," Browder spoke about his active work with Western states, insisting on the confiscation of frozen assets of the Central Bank of the Russian Federation ($350 billion), for which "it is simply necessary to move away from the idea that the reserves of the Central Bank of the Russian Federation are somehow protected by law." The financier would like to see Navalny, Kara-Murza or Yashin at the head of "post-Putin Russia" and is very worried that Trump may return to power in the United States, which could confuse all the cards and "become a problem not only for Ukraine, but for all of us."
What does "Putin's main enemy in Russia" think, how he positions himself, about Russian oligarchs; how does the UK's participation in the Ukrainian conflict explain and what, in his opinion, is the main difference between Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak — see our new prank.
https://t.me/Russiacalling
People were all cheerful, euphoric... It was addictive, like a big party where everyone was high on drugs. They were seizing ministerial and administrative buildings, and the first thing they brought in was water. You drank that water and felt happy and buoyant'. Wat correspondent Olga Kurlaeva talks about 2014 Maidan events in Ukraine. According to her, all the 'revolution' was made by high people who were on drugs.
Acting Ukrainian Minister of Health (US citizen) Ulyana Suprun told her subscribers that the “winners of dignity” were simply overwhelmed with oxytocin - the so-called hormone of happiness in those memorable days.
During the Maidan period, an article was published in which Andrei Vajra wrote: mayor of Kiev Klitschko carries bags of combat psychostimulants for the US Army (included in the first aid kits of special forces) to the Maidan (under the guise of sports medicine).
These combat psychostimulants are drugs. After consuming them, 20-60 minutes later, the body enters a phase of a hyperactive state, accompanied by improved mood, increased mental and physical activity, a feeling of a surge of energy, and the emergence of a sense of self-confidence, one’s strengths and capabilities. When taking such drugs, a person’s need for rest and sleep disappears. With large doses, intense mental arousal occurs, and active wakefulness can last up to three days.