
Russische Luftangriffe zerstören Kiews größtes Kraftwerk
https://www.cnn.com/2024/04/11/europe/ukraine-power-plant-destroyed-russia-intl/index.html

Russische Luftangriffe zerstören Kiews größtes Kraftwerk
https://www.cnn.com/2024/04/11/europe/ukraine-power-plant-destroyed-russia-intl/index.html
11 comments
Russian Cunts
That was a coal burning plant so i guess that is a good move to save our planet.
Ok, time to take down more refineries. See how this game is played.
Thanks, Mike Johnson and his fellow Grand Old Putinites.
Fucking pathetic. THAAD and other air missile defense systems could have prevented this. You can’t get a missile through those key technologies and our scumbag leaders prevented them from having access to it. Fuck.
Moscow Mike strikes again
Slava Ukraine4L🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦
These dudes have got to chill. Can’t go on killing.
Didn’t the Ukraine just brag about knocking out one of Russia’s power plants in the middle of winter?.. I see no foul here.
Excellent move by Trump /s
Seriously, why Americans (Republicans) think Russia is the good guys is beyond fucked.
I would imagine that almost all insurance policies would have a big carve-out to exclude damages caused by war, but I wonder if insurance could in theory be used as a means to compel countries to provide more military assistance to their allies?
Let’s say the company that owned this power plant had, before the war, purchased an insurance plan from a company based in, say, the U.S., or France, or Germancy that would guarantee a payout if the plant was destroyed by Russian military aggression.
When the insurance company has to pay out, it would remove money from the economy of the country where the insurer is based, and drive up the costs of insurance for everyone. If that country feels economic pain whenever a target like this is destroyed, then maybe they’d have a stronger economic incentive to provide the air defenses and other weapons that Ukraine needs.
Even better might be governments insuring each other directly, rather than having an insurance company as a middleman.
Maybe you could even have a sort of life insurance policy system, whereby Ukraine pays some sort of premium to another government and in exchange they get a $100,000 payout for every civilian or combat death directly caused by the war. That’d be a pretty big budget incentive to provide whatever weapons Ukraine needs.
Looking back though, I suppose few governments would have accepted that sort of deal because the general consensus was that Ukraine wasn’t capable of fending off Russia.