🔥 Расплата ИЗУВЕРА: Владимир, "РАСКРЕСТИВШИЙ" УКРАИНУ. Костры ХАОСА: Трамп приговорил Европу - Щелин

🔥 Расплата ИЗУВЕРА: Владимир, "РАСКРЕСТИВШИЙ" УКРАИНУ. Костры ХАОСА: Трамп приговорил Европу - Щелин01:17:50

Informations de téléchargement et détails de la vidéo 🔥 Расплата ИЗУВЕРА: Владимир, "РАСКРЕСТИВШИЙ" УКРАИНУ. Костры ХАОСА: Трамп приговорил Европу - Щелин

Auteur :

Александр ШЕЛЕСТ

Publié le :

28/07/2025

Vues :

473.9K

Description :

The video covers a wide range of topics, starting with Vladimir’s controversial actions at 00:06, the relocation of a baptism ceremony at 01:05, and speculation about Zelensky’s fate at 01:58. At 03:12 the focus shifts to Sikorsky’s flight and a diagnosis of Zelensky, followed by a brief look at punk culture at 04:44. Demographic trends versus protest are discussed at 07:12, while Trump’s visit to Scotland and its economic implications appear at 10:45. Escalation in a Trump‑style manner is highlighted at 11:50, and the failure of a businessman‑turned‑politician is noted at 12:50. The narrative continues with Russia’s stability versus Western hysteria at 13:50, fears and empty warehouses at 15:12, and the global impact of Trump’s sanctions at 15:59. Russia’s resilience is emphasized at 16:59, and Putin’s role as a signatory rather than a debater at 17:54. U.S. involvement and a Vietnam‑style strategy appear at 20:45, while the EU is portrayed as a threat rather than an economy at 21:44. The death of Helsinki and a burning belt are mentioned at 22:55, followed by a critique of Western underestimation of Russia at 24:12. Ukraine’s role conflict is explored at 26:13, and the futility of false dreams at 30:13. The resilience of faith is noted at 31:43, and a revival narrative involving Vladimir and Kronstadt at 33:33. Themes of self‑destruction, life counts, and historiophilia surface at 35:10, 35:40, and 36:30. The dangers of division, lack of repentance, and diplomatic hopes are discussed at 37:27, 39:09, and 41:07. The video examines sovereignty, aggression norms, isolation, and the symbolic nature of Ukraine at 43:48, 45:46, 46:31, 47:25, and 49:16. Reflections on sin, death, oblivion, prosperity, disappointment, and the choice between money and freedom appear at 51:06, 53:35, 55:54, and 57:41. Questions of identity and leadership surface at 59:35 and 59:48, while the inevitability of conflict, army growth, veteran employment, language prospects, and power dynamics are addressed from 01:01:01 to 01:08:12. The narrative concludes with reflections on war’s honesty, capitulation, the importance of audience words, Western fragmentation, self‑discovery, the limits of history, and the enduring light after broadcast ends at 01:17:09.