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6/24/2025, 5:17:17 PM
>>508588689
Я, кaк oбычнo, зooнaблюдaю зa вaшими пoхpюкaми чтoбы пoтoм cмeшнee oт тeopeмки былo. Ho вoпpoc был нe в этoм.
Я, кaк oбычнo, зooнaблюдaю зa вaшими пoхpюкaми чтoбы пoтoм cмeшнee oт тeopeмки былo. Ho вoпpoc был нe в этoм.
6/23/2025, 10:11:46 PM
>>508497492
3/?
His mother, Elena, a middle-aged woman with short gray hair, stood silently at the ceremony, struggling to contain her grief.
Less than three weeks after his birthday, Alexander was gone. He arrived at the front in February 2025. On March 9, he was killed by a mortar shell. He was a “medic-rifleman,” his aunt said. His friends from the state-sponsored "Movement of the First" youth group posted a tribute online. "How could he have ended up there if he only turned 18 a month before he died???" one commenter asked, bewildered. At his funeral in a hospital mourning hall, officials gave speeches. His peers, his friend Anastasia said, "chose to remain silent."
For other young men, the path to war is not one of patriotic fervor but of desperate escape. Vitaly Ivanov, also 18, came from Tayturka, a working-class village in Siberia with a population of 5,000. He dropped out of a mechanics program and worked odd jobs—shoveling coal, digging potatoes, and operating trampolines in neighboring towns. He told his friend Mikhail that his plan was to finish his mandatory conscript service and then get a construction job.
But in November 2024, Vitaly’s life took a dark turn. He was implicated in a robbery at a local store. Having previously been detained for a fight, he was a known quantity to the local police. They summoned him to the station. What happened next, he recounted in a frantic video message to his girlfriend, Alina. "This is fucking awful," he said, his voice shaking. "They took me to the district police department. They put handcuffs on me. And how they started... fucking devils, I'm just in fucking shock—they beat the shit out of me."
3/?
His mother, Elena, a middle-aged woman with short gray hair, stood silently at the ceremony, struggling to contain her grief.
Less than three weeks after his birthday, Alexander was gone. He arrived at the front in February 2025. On March 9, he was killed by a mortar shell. He was a “medic-rifleman,” his aunt said. His friends from the state-sponsored "Movement of the First" youth group posted a tribute online. "How could he have ended up there if he only turned 18 a month before he died???" one commenter asked, bewildered. At his funeral in a hospital mourning hall, officials gave speeches. His peers, his friend Anastasia said, "chose to remain silent."
For other young men, the path to war is not one of patriotic fervor but of desperate escape. Vitaly Ivanov, also 18, came from Tayturka, a working-class village in Siberia with a population of 5,000. He dropped out of a mechanics program and worked odd jobs—shoveling coal, digging potatoes, and operating trampolines in neighboring towns. He told his friend Mikhail that his plan was to finish his mandatory conscript service and then get a construction job.
But in November 2024, Vitaly’s life took a dark turn. He was implicated in a robbery at a local store. Having previously been detained for a fight, he was a known quantity to the local police. They summoned him to the station. What happened next, he recounted in a frantic video message to his girlfriend, Alina. "This is fucking awful," he said, his voice shaking. "They took me to the district police department. They put handcuffs on me. And how they started... fucking devils, I'm just in fucking shock—they beat the shit out of me."
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