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Subject: »NEWS AROUND THE WORLD
new answers on Ukraine airplane (mh-17) shot-down case.... no matter that west world data are secret... the truth (maybe) is revealing... what do you think about this?
http://antifashist.com/item/ukrainskij-su-25-unichtozhivshij-boing-pilotiroval-dmitrij-yakacud.html#ixzz3KVFRavvW
now It really seems that ukrainian SU-25 shot down that plane... but what is much worse is the fact that if this is true, all EU was lying to all inhabitants and it is inexcusable. If EU is lying to own people like US, it is end of everything was is good on europe :-(.
What are your opinions, if you have some :-)
http://antifashist.com/item/ukrainskij-su-25-unichtozhivshij-boing-pilotiroval-dmitrij-yakacud.html#ixzz3KVFRavvW
now It really seems that ukrainian SU-25 shot down that plane... but what is much worse is the fact that if this is true, all EU was lying to all inhabitants and it is inexcusable. If EU is lying to own people like US, it is end of everything was is good on europe :-(.
What are your opinions, if you have some :-)
Looks like trustworthy site by Mother Russia :D
What's the point in linking to non-english sites anyway. Shall we discuss based on google translate? :)
(edited)
What's the point in linking to non-english sites anyway. Shall we discuss based on google translate? :)
(edited)
...another three new posts about the same old nonsense, from a "independent" "NEW!" (russian) revelations.. which have been debunked already... by the way.
Simple question, why on earth do you believe this nonsense, and accuse the whole of EU of lying...? :-D
...and by the way, most western media put the blame on Putin personally for this crash, not due to evidence of that fatal day, but because he is responsible for starting and escalating this military conflict, with his "unknown" (marsian) army / armies, that fight for the mother russian "federal russian" (ex-cccp nations union) cause. The noble separatits that fight for their (virtual) independent "donieck rep."state, to join russia next day.. just like crimea, an to weaken Ukraine economically by a huge margin... eh... and the sadest thing is, that Putin could end this conflict within a day - if, he wanted... even the Belarussian dictator Lukashenko stated that to the russian media. :-D :-]
"no" russian army
(edited)
Simple question, why on earth do you believe this nonsense, and accuse the whole of EU of lying...? :-D
...and by the way, most western media put the blame on Putin personally for this crash, not due to evidence of that fatal day, but because he is responsible for starting and escalating this military conflict, with his "unknown" (marsian) army / armies, that fight for the mother russian "federal russian" (ex-cccp nations union) cause. The noble separatits that fight for their (virtual) independent "donieck rep."state, to join russia next day.. just like crimea, an to weaken Ukraine economically by a huge margin... eh... and the sadest thing is, that Putin could end this conflict within a day - if, he wanted... even the Belarussian dictator Lukashenko stated that to the russian media. :-D :-]
"no" russian army
(edited)
Ukrainian TV, Ukrainian Major and military expert Oleksandr Taran: "There are no Russian troops in Ukraine."
I post you link with yandex translation from RU to ENG which is much better tool than google translator in case of russia language :-)
you didnt tell anything to case SU and MH-17 (the point of question) so I consider your post as a spam, no reason to read it whole :-)
You lost everything what was imported...why you react, it was quite useless ?
Or you had to react by some propaganda answer, not related to question cos somebody pay you for that :-D ?
You lost everything what was imported...why you react, it was quite useless ?
Or you had to react by some propaganda answer, not related to question cos somebody pay you for that :-D ?
There was another slovak spectator and told the same information... the result is simple, russians have invisible soldiers so the world had to fear of russia army :-)
Guinness Book of Records world record for the most Guinness Book of Records
Martyn Tovey, aged 57, has spent over four decades building up a whopping 353 individual annuals from around the world - plus 2,164 items of memorabilia
Record breaker: Stats fan Martin Tovey enters the record books for his memorabilia collection
A man has earned a place in his favourite records book for owning the world's biggest collection of Guinness World Records annuals.
Martyn Tovey, aged 57, has spent more than 40 years building up a collection of 353 individual annuals from around the world - plus 2,164 items of memorabilia.
It all started after Martyn won the Guinness World Records as a school prize and his mum has given him the latest annual for Christmas every year since 1971.
The computer security consultant has spent years tracking down copies of the earlier editions for his collection.
His favourite record was set by long jumper Bob Beamon with a leap of eight metres 90cms (29feet two-and-a-half inches) at the Mexico Olympics in 1968, and the athlete's mark was not eclipsed until 1991.
Martyn, who lives with wife Fran, said: "I was a fan of athletics and Bob Beamon's jump was one of the most amazing things I had ever seen. I can still remember my amazement at such an astonishing feat.
"My interest in the books was driven by a childhood obsession with facts and figures. The books gave me a fantastic reference guide, which was updated with the latest data every year. I asked for one for Christmas and have had one every year since. Hopefully I will get one this year.
"My favourite is the 1960 edition with handwritten corrections by Norris McWhirter, while the strangest is perhaps a 'Sportsman Set' consisting of a bottle of aftershave and a Guinness paperback book. I find out about special editions from around the world and try and track them down.
"Alongside the main annuals, I collect toys, games, spin-off publications, novelty items and promotional material. I have not got a clue how much I have spent - I dare not guess."
Guinness have crowned Martyn, from Radstock, Somerset, for the 'Largest collection of Guinness World Records Memorabilia' and 'Largest Collection of Guinness World Records Annuals'.
Editor-in-chief Craig Glenday said: "We've been monitoring record-breaking collections for years, and we cover everything from airline boarding passes to zebras.
"But it wasn't until this year, when we met Martyn, that we realised we should open a category for the largest collection of Guinness World Records books.
"Such is Martyn's dedication to documenting our history that his incredible collection outstrips even the archive here at Guinness World Records."
A Guinness Book of Records with books, that's funny :)
Martyn Tovey, aged 57, has spent over four decades building up a whopping 353 individual annuals from around the world - plus 2,164 items of memorabilia
Record breaker: Stats fan Martin Tovey enters the record books for his memorabilia collection
A man has earned a place in his favourite records book for owning the world's biggest collection of Guinness World Records annuals.
Martyn Tovey, aged 57, has spent more than 40 years building up a collection of 353 individual annuals from around the world - plus 2,164 items of memorabilia.
It all started after Martyn won the Guinness World Records as a school prize and his mum has given him the latest annual for Christmas every year since 1971.
The computer security consultant has spent years tracking down copies of the earlier editions for his collection.
His favourite record was set by long jumper Bob Beamon with a leap of eight metres 90cms (29feet two-and-a-half inches) at the Mexico Olympics in 1968, and the athlete's mark was not eclipsed until 1991.
Martyn, who lives with wife Fran, said: "I was a fan of athletics and Bob Beamon's jump was one of the most amazing things I had ever seen. I can still remember my amazement at such an astonishing feat.
"My interest in the books was driven by a childhood obsession with facts and figures. The books gave me a fantastic reference guide, which was updated with the latest data every year. I asked for one for Christmas and have had one every year since. Hopefully I will get one this year.
"My favourite is the 1960 edition with handwritten corrections by Norris McWhirter, while the strangest is perhaps a 'Sportsman Set' consisting of a bottle of aftershave and a Guinness paperback book. I find out about special editions from around the world and try and track them down.
"Alongside the main annuals, I collect toys, games, spin-off publications, novelty items and promotional material. I have not got a clue how much I have spent - I dare not guess."
Guinness have crowned Martyn, from Radstock, Somerset, for the 'Largest collection of Guinness World Records Memorabilia' and 'Largest Collection of Guinness World Records Annuals'.
Editor-in-chief Craig Glenday said: "We've been monitoring record-breaking collections for years, and we cover everything from airline boarding passes to zebras.
"But it wasn't until this year, when we met Martyn, that we realised we should open a category for the largest collection of Guinness World Records books.
"Such is Martyn's dedication to documenting our history that his incredible collection outstrips even the archive here at Guinness World Records."
A Guinness Book of Records with books, that's funny :)
Student sent £3,600 worth of gifts from Amazon because of 'computer glitch'
A student who received 51 free gifts from Amazon because of a 'computer glitch' has been told he can keep the items
Amazon packages
Robert Quinn said that he believed a computer glitch had caused the goods to be sent to him, instead of a returns depot, as the items had been packaged with returns labels Photo: Alamy
A student from Bromley in south London has been told he can keep £3,600 worth of goods sent by Amazon after a "computer glitch" meant 51 packages were mistakenly sent to his home.
Robert Quinn, 22, started receiving packages addressed to him last week, with items ranging from a £150 baby buggy to a 55-inch Samsung 3D television worth £889.
Other parcels contained items such as a Galaxy Pro tablet worth £338, a single bed and a chest of drawers.
Mr Quinn, who is currently studying engineering at University of Liverpool told the Daily Mail that he believed a computer glitch had caused the goods to be sent to him, instead of a returns depot, as the items had been packaged with returns labels.
"At first I phoned up Amazon and they said that people must be 'gifting' them to me, but there’s no way that’s happening because I don’t know any of these people," he said.
"I was worried that people were losing out on their stuff so I phoned Amazon again and said I’m happy to accept these gifts if they are footing the cost, but I’m not happy if these people are going to lose out. But Amazon said 'it’s on us'."
Mr Quinn said that he was still receiving packages so "doesn't think they have rectified the problem".
He said he planned to give some of the gifts away as Christmas presents, give some to charity and sell some back to Amazon in order to earn some money to put towards a cannabis grinder he is designing.
"I should have about £1,600 to play with this summer and I might take my girlfriend to Bruges," he said. "And at the moment I'm working on an electrical cannabis grinder. I’m thinking about getting a patent on it."
A spokesman for Amazon told the Telegraph: "This matter has now been resolved and I can confirm that on this occasion the customer has been informed that he can keep the items that were delivered."
Some of Mr Quinn's £3,600 haul
Samsung 55 inch 3D TV
£889
Galazy Tab Pro
£338
Radeon R9 290X graphics card
£250
Cosatto Supa Baby Buggy
£150
Draper leaf blower
£130
Large Nobo projector screen
£120
Brabantia ironing board
£70
Small Android tablet
£70
Tonbux tablet
£62
Bookcase
£50
Dimplex Optiflame Heater
£50
Mobius HD Action cam
£50
Sony PSP console
£50
Wahl professional shaver
£50
This is not the not first time that a computer glitch has resulted in customers being sent free or reduced goods. In January, the tools and hardware retailer Screwfix.com suffered a technical glitch that reduced the price of everything on its website to just £34.99 overnight – allowing early shoppers to choose "click and collect" items and pick them up before the store spotted the mistake.
Power tools and big ticket items such as ride-on mowers that cost thousands of pounds were reduced to less than £40 at the online checkout.
Screwfix soon realised its mistake and told staff not to hand over orders, but not before one customer picked up £1,230 worth of power drills for £139.
That's a really nice December present!! Early Christmas :D
A student who received 51 free gifts from Amazon because of a 'computer glitch' has been told he can keep the items
Amazon packages
Robert Quinn said that he believed a computer glitch had caused the goods to be sent to him, instead of a returns depot, as the items had been packaged with returns labels Photo: Alamy
A student from Bromley in south London has been told he can keep £3,600 worth of goods sent by Amazon after a "computer glitch" meant 51 packages were mistakenly sent to his home.
Robert Quinn, 22, started receiving packages addressed to him last week, with items ranging from a £150 baby buggy to a 55-inch Samsung 3D television worth £889.
Other parcels contained items such as a Galaxy Pro tablet worth £338, a single bed and a chest of drawers.
Mr Quinn, who is currently studying engineering at University of Liverpool told the Daily Mail that he believed a computer glitch had caused the goods to be sent to him, instead of a returns depot, as the items had been packaged with returns labels.
"At first I phoned up Amazon and they said that people must be 'gifting' them to me, but there’s no way that’s happening because I don’t know any of these people," he said.
"I was worried that people were losing out on their stuff so I phoned Amazon again and said I’m happy to accept these gifts if they are footing the cost, but I’m not happy if these people are going to lose out. But Amazon said 'it’s on us'."
Mr Quinn said that he was still receiving packages so "doesn't think they have rectified the problem".
He said he planned to give some of the gifts away as Christmas presents, give some to charity and sell some back to Amazon in order to earn some money to put towards a cannabis grinder he is designing.
"I should have about £1,600 to play with this summer and I might take my girlfriend to Bruges," he said. "And at the moment I'm working on an electrical cannabis grinder. I’m thinking about getting a patent on it."
A spokesman for Amazon told the Telegraph: "This matter has now been resolved and I can confirm that on this occasion the customer has been informed that he can keep the items that were delivered."
Some of Mr Quinn's £3,600 haul
Samsung 55 inch 3D TV
£889
Galazy Tab Pro
£338
Radeon R9 290X graphics card
£250
Cosatto Supa Baby Buggy
£150
Draper leaf blower
£130
Large Nobo projector screen
£120
Brabantia ironing board
£70
Small Android tablet
£70
Tonbux tablet
£62
Bookcase
£50
Dimplex Optiflame Heater
£50
Mobius HD Action cam
£50
Sony PSP console
£50
Wahl professional shaver
£50
This is not the not first time that a computer glitch has resulted in customers being sent free or reduced goods. In January, the tools and hardware retailer Screwfix.com suffered a technical glitch that reduced the price of everything on its website to just £34.99 overnight – allowing early shoppers to choose "click and collect" items and pick them up before the store spotted the mistake.
Power tools and big ticket items such as ride-on mowers that cost thousands of pounds were reduced to less than £40 at the online checkout.
Screwfix soon realised its mistake and told staff not to hand over orders, but not before one customer picked up £1,230 worth of power drills for £139.
That's a really nice December present!! Early Christmas :D
I've another "lol" from Ukraine...
Ukraine just created its own version of Orwell's 'Ministry of Truth'
KIEV, Ukraine –- The Ukraine government has established a department that critics are calling the “Ministry of Truth” — borrowing a term from George Orwell's classic dystopian novel 1984.
Officially called the Ministry of Information Policy, the new office will be headed by Yuriy Stets, head of the Information Security Department of the National Guard of Ukraine. A close ally to President Petro Poroshenko, Stets was formerly chief producer of the TV channel that Poroshenko sill owns.
While its main objective appears to be confronting Russia’s formidable propaganda machine, the Ministry is likely to also restrict free speech and inhibit journalists' work — particularly in war-torn eastern Ukraine, according to observers.
At a demonstration outside parliament, Ukrainian journalists decried the new ministry, which deputies approved in the Verkhovna Rada late on Tuesday, along with the rest of the country’s Cabinet of Ministers.
About 40 journalists and activists from Ukrainian watchdog groups Chesno (Honest) and Stop Censorship! held posters that read “Hello, Big Brother." They urged lawmakers entering the parliament ahead of Tuesday’s session to vote against appointing Stets as its head.
The creation of the ministry comes on the heels of critical reports from journalists and rights groups about its use of controversial weapons in eastern Ukraine, as well as possible war crimes committed by its armed forces.
Ukrainian journalists protest in Kiev
Journalist turned parliament deputy Mustafa Nayyem joins reporters outside Ukraine's parliament on Dec. 2 to protest the creation of a new Ministry of Information Policy, which they liken to an Orwell-style "Ministry of Truth."
Image: Christopher Miller/Mashable
Ukraine's government is clearly frustrated with by its lack of success in disseminating its messages. “You must understand, we are being killed by [Russian] guns as well as their propaganda,” a top security official told Mashable when explaining why he supported the creation of the ministry.
A report released last month by The Interpreter website describes just how Russian propaganda works, and how effectively it is being used as a weapon of the Kremlin. The report outlines a “hybrid war” that combines disinformation “to sow confusion via conspiracy theories and proliferate falsehoods” with “covert and small-scale military operations.”
Still, there are some in the government who do not endorse the ministry. A senior official in the Presidential Administration, who spoke anonymously because he feared repercussions from officials for talking to a journalist, said he was “very concerned” about the ministry and how it would be used.
“Honestly, I’m not sure such a ministry is needed,” the official said, adding that others inside the administration have also questioned the move.
"The way to fight Russian propaganda is with honestly and transparency, not trying to beat Russia at its own game."
The Ministry of Information Policy was pushed through with little notice and even less debate on the parliament floor. That could be because the president himself pushed the concept on members of his party, the largest faction in parliament, and has great sway over the ruling coalition.
Deputies whom Mashable spoke with ahead of the parliament session on Tuesday said Poroshenko personally urged them to support the ministry in a tense last-minute meeting called late Monday night.
Former investigative journalist turned lawmaker Serhiy Leshchenko, who was elected in last month’s vote on the ticket of the president’s party, was present at the meeting. He says Poroshenko “was very serious” about confirming Stets the following day in parliament.
Leshchenko, a long-time advocate for journalists' rights, said he would vote against the ministry. Inside parliament on Tuesday, he posed for a photograph with a sign that read "Stop censorship! Journalists against the Ministry of Truth."
Oksana Romaniuk, director of local media watchdog Institute of Mass Information and Ukraine representative for Reporters Without Borders, told Mashable that “the government wants to control the media’s messages first, and second, they want to control access to the messages.”
Details on how the ministry will operate are murky. No documents were made available to the public or deputies, and Stets did not reply to Mashable's requests for comment. But Romaniuk fears the government has given itself "carte blanche."
Reporters Without Borders said it “firmly opposes” the information ministry. “Putting the government in charge of ‘information policy’ would be major retrograde step that would open the way to grave excesses,” said Christophe Deloire, the watchdog organization's secretary-general.
“In a democratic society, the media should not be regulated by the government. The creation of an information ministry is the worst of all possible responses to the serious challenges that the government is facing."
Journalists demonstrating at parliament likened the move to taking a step “back to the USSR.” Several held signs that combined the Soviet Union’s hammer and sickle with the Nazi swastika.
“This is a fascist move,” one demonstrator told an observing who was arguing in support of the ministry. She said it would only lend fodder to Russia’s argument that Kiev is now being led by a “fascist junta.”
And she wasn’t the only one who thought so.
"Dear team Poroshenko, the pursuit of absolute power in this country means a final career," Tatyana Nikolaenko, chief editor at Ukraine's Insider magazine, wrote on Facebook. "If you create this 'Ministry of Truth' the president's rating will collapse as quickly as it rose in the winter of this year."
She added: “You can not win the information war [against Russia] with it, because with the creation of the Ministry you'll give Russian propaganda endless references to [Nazi Minister of Propaganda Joseph] Goebbels and Orwell."
But Kiev sees the creation of the ministry as a necessary move to fight Russia’s incessant propaganda, which has been particularly successful over the course of the ongoing crisis.
The concept was first floated on Sunday, when Interior Ministry advisor Anton Herashchenko mentioned it in a post on Facebook. In it, he mentioned the need to counter the Russian message.
"There is an idea to create the structure of the Cabinet of Ministers Ministry of Information Policy, whose main task is the protection of Ukraine's information space of the Russian propaganda and counter-propaganda in Russia, in the temporarily occupied territories of Crimea and [eastern Ukraine]. This issue is long overdue and I would even say too late," Herashchenko wrote.
Stets relayed his thoughts on the new ministry in his own Facebook post on Monday.
"I see it this way: different states with different historical and cultural experiences in times of crisis came to need to create a body of executive power that would control and manage the information security of the country," Stets wrote.
According to Stets, none of the current state structures could efficiently handle those tasks.
“The information and communications space remain uncoordinated now, full of contradictions and influence of foreign agents, and under conditions of geopolitical wars becomes a weak part of the country, a subject of enemy attacks,” he added.
(edited)
Ukraine just created its own version of Orwell's 'Ministry of Truth'
KIEV, Ukraine –- The Ukraine government has established a department that critics are calling the “Ministry of Truth” — borrowing a term from George Orwell's classic dystopian novel 1984.
Officially called the Ministry of Information Policy, the new office will be headed by Yuriy Stets, head of the Information Security Department of the National Guard of Ukraine. A close ally to President Petro Poroshenko, Stets was formerly chief producer of the TV channel that Poroshenko sill owns.
While its main objective appears to be confronting Russia’s formidable propaganda machine, the Ministry is likely to also restrict free speech and inhibit journalists' work — particularly in war-torn eastern Ukraine, according to observers.
At a demonstration outside parliament, Ukrainian journalists decried the new ministry, which deputies approved in the Verkhovna Rada late on Tuesday, along with the rest of the country’s Cabinet of Ministers.
About 40 journalists and activists from Ukrainian watchdog groups Chesno (Honest) and Stop Censorship! held posters that read “Hello, Big Brother." They urged lawmakers entering the parliament ahead of Tuesday’s session to vote against appointing Stets as its head.
The creation of the ministry comes on the heels of critical reports from journalists and rights groups about its use of controversial weapons in eastern Ukraine, as well as possible war crimes committed by its armed forces.
Ukrainian journalists protest in Kiev
Journalist turned parliament deputy Mustafa Nayyem joins reporters outside Ukraine's parliament on Dec. 2 to protest the creation of a new Ministry of Information Policy, which they liken to an Orwell-style "Ministry of Truth."
Image: Christopher Miller/Mashable
Ukraine's government is clearly frustrated with by its lack of success in disseminating its messages. “You must understand, we are being killed by [Russian] guns as well as their propaganda,” a top security official told Mashable when explaining why he supported the creation of the ministry.
A report released last month by The Interpreter website describes just how Russian propaganda works, and how effectively it is being used as a weapon of the Kremlin. The report outlines a “hybrid war” that combines disinformation “to sow confusion via conspiracy theories and proliferate falsehoods” with “covert and small-scale military operations.”
Still, there are some in the government who do not endorse the ministry. A senior official in the Presidential Administration, who spoke anonymously because he feared repercussions from officials for talking to a journalist, said he was “very concerned” about the ministry and how it would be used.
“Honestly, I’m not sure such a ministry is needed,” the official said, adding that others inside the administration have also questioned the move.
"The way to fight Russian propaganda is with honestly and transparency, not trying to beat Russia at its own game."
The Ministry of Information Policy was pushed through with little notice and even less debate on the parliament floor. That could be because the president himself pushed the concept on members of his party, the largest faction in parliament, and has great sway over the ruling coalition.
Deputies whom Mashable spoke with ahead of the parliament session on Tuesday said Poroshenko personally urged them to support the ministry in a tense last-minute meeting called late Monday night.
Former investigative journalist turned lawmaker Serhiy Leshchenko, who was elected in last month’s vote on the ticket of the president’s party, was present at the meeting. He says Poroshenko “was very serious” about confirming Stets the following day in parliament.
Leshchenko, a long-time advocate for journalists' rights, said he would vote against the ministry. Inside parliament on Tuesday, he posed for a photograph with a sign that read "Stop censorship! Journalists against the Ministry of Truth."
Oksana Romaniuk, director of local media watchdog Institute of Mass Information and Ukraine representative for Reporters Without Borders, told Mashable that “the government wants to control the media’s messages first, and second, they want to control access to the messages.”
Details on how the ministry will operate are murky. No documents were made available to the public or deputies, and Stets did not reply to Mashable's requests for comment. But Romaniuk fears the government has given itself "carte blanche."
Reporters Without Borders said it “firmly opposes” the information ministry. “Putting the government in charge of ‘information policy’ would be major retrograde step that would open the way to grave excesses,” said Christophe Deloire, the watchdog organization's secretary-general.
“In a democratic society, the media should not be regulated by the government. The creation of an information ministry is the worst of all possible responses to the serious challenges that the government is facing."
Journalists demonstrating at parliament likened the move to taking a step “back to the USSR.” Several held signs that combined the Soviet Union’s hammer and sickle with the Nazi swastika.
“This is a fascist move,” one demonstrator told an observing who was arguing in support of the ministry. She said it would only lend fodder to Russia’s argument that Kiev is now being led by a “fascist junta.”
And she wasn’t the only one who thought so.
"Dear team Poroshenko, the pursuit of absolute power in this country means a final career," Tatyana Nikolaenko, chief editor at Ukraine's Insider magazine, wrote on Facebook. "If you create this 'Ministry of Truth' the president's rating will collapse as quickly as it rose in the winter of this year."
She added: “You can not win the information war [against Russia] with it, because with the creation of the Ministry you'll give Russian propaganda endless references to [Nazi Minister of Propaganda Joseph] Goebbels and Orwell."
But Kiev sees the creation of the ministry as a necessary move to fight Russia’s incessant propaganda, which has been particularly successful over the course of the ongoing crisis.
The concept was first floated on Sunday, when Interior Ministry advisor Anton Herashchenko mentioned it in a post on Facebook. In it, he mentioned the need to counter the Russian message.
"There is an idea to create the structure of the Cabinet of Ministers Ministry of Information Policy, whose main task is the protection of Ukraine's information space of the Russian propaganda and counter-propaganda in Russia, in the temporarily occupied territories of Crimea and [eastern Ukraine]. This issue is long overdue and I would even say too late," Herashchenko wrote.
Stets relayed his thoughts on the new ministry in his own Facebook post on Monday.
"I see it this way: different states with different historical and cultural experiences in times of crisis came to need to create a body of executive power that would control and manage the information security of the country," Stets wrote.
According to Stets, none of the current state structures could efficiently handle those tasks.
“The information and communications space remain uncoordinated now, full of contradictions and influence of foreign agents, and under conditions of geopolitical wars becomes a weak part of the country, a subject of enemy attacks,” he added.
(edited)
Ah, I almost forget....
Another super-lol ukrainian news ;)
From UKRAINE TODAY (!!!), the Ihor Kolomoyskyi's media...
Suspected member of far-right group becomes Kyiv police chief
Another super-lol ukrainian news ;)
From UKRAINE TODAY (!!!), the Ihor Kolomoyskyi's media...
Suspected member of far-right group becomes Kyiv police chief
1001 posts of Russian Ukraine propaganda is far from lol ... the lol part is people from the free world posting such nonsense! Or maybe it's sad ... I'm not sure anymore :/
(edited)
(edited)
LOL, communist UK decided what kind of sex is good for people :-DDD
This is really ill, it is same as we had in Slovakia too under USSR regtime :-), same style.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/a-long-list-of-sex-acts-just-got-banned-in-uk-porn-9897174.html
This is really ill, it is same as we had in Slovakia too under USSR regtime :-), same style.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/a-long-list-of-sex-acts-just-got-banned-in-uk-porn-9897174.html