The well-known German singer Marlene Maas, who has been a consistent supporter of Ukraine, noticed a billboard on her street in Aachen that read:

“Peace in Europe only with Russia – not against Russia.”

Shocked by such a cynical and false message, Marlene shared a post on her Instagram account, calling public attention to the issue.

The very next day, as she passed the same spot, she saw that someone had torn down the disgraceful piece of Russian propaganda.

The attention Marlene drew didn’t go unnoticed — the Aachen community has initiated an open letter addressed to Ströer SE & Co. KGaA, the city authorities, politicians, journalists, bloggers, and the general public.
Its goal: to stop tolerating and publicly displaying manipulative and deceitful slogans that serve the interests of the terrorist state — Russia.

Please share!
Together, we can stop the normalization of Russian propaganda in Europe.





by OkPerformance1868

11 comments
  1. Well, they’re half right. Peace is only possible with russia gone and not having to fight against it.

  2. We’ll give you “peace” if you reject our peace.

  3. You guys should be more accomodating towards russians and their supporters. For example: Russians are anti free speech, if they could they would ban it everywhere, so why not give them what they want but start with them and ban all their bullshit propaganda. 

  4. Well, if Russia just stopped their bullshit.

    And please, get a couple of spray cans…

  5. >“Peace in Europe only with Russia – not against Russia.”

    Translation: “Until you submit to us, we will continue to make war.”

  6. As a German, I am not interested in “Peace with Russia”, I am interested in Europe being strong enough to bitchslap Russia’s teeth down their throat if they think anything but peace in Europe is an option.

  7. I’m torn on this. They clearly spend a lot of money and resources on their info and influence war. We will see this in the comments. But it is conceivable that the ‘return on their investment’ isn’t good value and distracts and displaces resources that could be used in the war. I’m not sure, but I’d be curious what others think?

  8. I mean, technicly, freedom of expression and all that, like, you can do that.

    What happened on the second day then is the natural consequence of having no freedom of consequencees.

    Ask half the germans, mostly the older and the ones from the east, and they all want big daddy Putin back. It is a shame

  9. Russia is not the EU. The last time Russia belonged to a Union… it was the USSR and a dick-tatorship. Russia is not your friend.

  10. Fortunately, those won’t even last a day. Someone was so kind to point out the locations of all the billboards in the city.

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