• @anlumo
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    661 year ago

    I’ll never understand why he intentionally let himself be captured by Russia. The outcome was inevitable.

    • @ANIMATEK
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      1 year ago

      He is so notorious because he was willing to selflessly put himself in the frontline to prove a point.

      • @chitak166
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        -261 year ago

        That doesn’t make any sense, but okay.

        • @[email protected]
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          341 year ago

          Martyrdom. Navalny knew what it would mean to return; he also knew the risk of not returning (constantly trying to avoid shitty assassination attempts with collateral damage).

          • @chitak166
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            -141 year ago

            I mean, you don’t have to be convicted to be a martyr.

            Look at Snowden.

            • @Plopp
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              141 year ago

              Speaking of… When was the last time we heard from Snowden? Haven’t seen his name in the media since basically the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

              • PrettyFlyForAFatGuy
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                61 year ago

                probably keeping his head down trying not to be used as a pawn in the cross politics of the US and russia

                • Heresy_generator
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                  -21 year ago

                  LMAO. Yeah, that’s why he ran to hide under Putin’s skirt; because he didn’t want to be used as a pawn in Russian propaganda.

              • @chitak166
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                -51 year ago

                He usually ends up in the news for shilling Signal.

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              I don’t know whether it had a significant impact in Russia, but the rest of the world only knows/cares about the guy because he went back. Otherwise he’d just be yet another person murdered by Putin’s regime.

          • @chitak166
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            1 year ago

            I guess you’re right.

            Maybe he did have a greater impact getting poisoned, imprisoned, and ‘defenestrated’ than he would have had outside of Russia.

            Time will tell, I won’t hold my breath.

            Personally, I think you’re just finding ways to agree with the crowd even if they’re wrong. I don’t hold most people above that behavior.

    • @KISSmyOS
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      1 year ago

      deleted by creator

      • @anlumo
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        41 year ago

        Basically he gambled that Putin will die before him.

        Well, that didn’t work out as planned for him.

  • @Rubezahl
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    481 year ago

    A regime like Putin’s is stable until it suddenly is not. Russia has a lot of dark times ahead of it.

    • @Sanyanov
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      1 year ago

      Russians honestly are mostly waiting for those times; chaos is frightening, but stable decline into a dystopia is even worse.

      Besides, keeping on with “stable” regime means losing many, many lives; possibly way more than a radical change can entail. But that depends on who and how comes to power.

      • danque
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        81 year ago

        That would depend on your next president. Personally from an outsider view I hope it’s not trump again.

        • @Boiglenoight
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          01 year ago

          Same. I worry about the complacency of voters though. People are unhappy with Biden, I think more on their perceptions of him rather than his record. Although his support of Israel is not helping.

      • @KISSmyOS
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        1 year ago

        deleted by creator

  • @extant
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    271 year ago

    Hopefully he disappeared because someone thinks he might make for a good replacement of someone in the future, but more likely they finally tortured him to death and destroyed his body so he can’t become a martyr.

    • @Crack0n7uesday
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      1 year ago

      Be careful what you wish for, he’s more hard line than Putin. War in Ukraine? He thinks Russia isn’t sending enough troops, and he wants all of Ukraine. Way worse for LGBTQ+ rights than Putin, and that’s not easy to do. He almost makes Putin look like a human rights activist.

  • @RizzRustbolt
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    211 year ago

    Lame.

    The catholics would have sentenced his corpse.

  • @cheese_greater
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    201 year ago

    Any possibillity this could be the final spark before the powder keg detonates?

      • @cheese_greater
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        181 year ago

        I wish he stayed in Germany, why the hell did he return?

        • @Cosmonauticus
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          121 year ago

          Hard to effect positive change in a country you’re not in

          • @cheese_greater
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            61 year ago

            People who have such a sense of mission and put themselves on the line like that are so amazing to me, I spent enough time feeling like I was in prison that I always wanted to be free and ok as soon as I could contrive that

      • @cheese_greater
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        111 year ago

        Sorry internet friend 😢 Do you live there or are you referring more to it like I am?

          • @cheese_greater
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            21 year ago

            What was the deal with the Russian Tax agency or whatever getting hacked and damaged?

            • @Sanyanov
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              21 year ago

              Claims are denied, and I didn’t see any change touching me.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    111 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Russian judges have halted new criminal proceedings for the jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny as supporters say he has not contacted his lawyers in nearly two weeks and a UN official has said his absence amounted to a “forced disappearance”.

    Courts halted seven judicial hearings on Monday “until [Navalny’s] whereabouts [is] established”, his lawyers said, further raising concerns that the Kremlin critic could be muzzled or even killed as Vladimir Putin has announced plans to extend his rule for a fifth presidential term.

    Kira Yarmysh, an aide to Navalny, said his team had sent requests to nearly 200 Russian pre-trial detention centres searching for more information on the missing opposition leader but had not been able to find him.

    The Kremlin has not answered questions on Navalny’s whereabouts, with Putin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov saying his team had “neither the intention nor the ability to track the fate of prisoners.”

    Mr Navalny’s lawyers, who have been prevented from meeting him since 6 December, were told by the court that their client is no longer held in the Vladimir region, without providing any further details,” Katzarova said.

    Navalny’s supporters have launched an anti-Putin guerrilla campaign including billboards in Moscow, St Petersburg and Novosibirsk with a QR-code linking to a website that calls for Putin critics to use nonviolent “partisan” tactics to voice their dissent.


    The original article contains 507 words, the summary contains 222 words. Saved 56%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!