Russian “military reporter”, read combatant, Romanov, shares screenshots of a conversation about partisan activities in the Luhansk Oblast, Kreminna district. According to it, everything that Russians touch is being poisoned: food, alcohol, vapes. Energy drinks that are mixed with sulphur…

by Orcasystems99

12 comments
  1. Russian “military reporter”, read combatant, Romanov, shares screenshots of a conversation about partisan activities in the Luhansk Oblast, Kreminna district.
    According to it, everything that Russians touch is being poisoned: food, alcohol, vapes. Energy drinks that are mixed with sulphur.
    Romanov suggests people caught doing this should be killed (in their own country).
    Who is it that keeps saying how eastern Ukrainians all want to be part of Russia?

  2. About energy drinks with sulfur:

    1. Shame’s not fluorine.

    2. Won’t be surprised, if some russians are doing that too, because getting evacced with stomach ulcers from sulfuric acid still leaves greater chances to survive than going on contact line.

  3. Sounds like they have very bad tap water there .

    Maybe the Russians should, get the hint , and leave

  4. Hate to say it but I think it’s pretty clear by now – ruzzians don’t take subtle hints. If you want to make clear to them, that they’re not welcome you need to shoot at them – poison isn’t going to do the trick – consider the crap they eat in ruzzia, the huts they live in, the holes they defecate in and the dirt on the road they swallow every day.

  5. I wonder, how many ruskies have to die, till it gets into their heads, that they arent welcome in Ukraine.

  6. How the Ukrainians respond to “liberation!” Even if Russia had managed to topple Kiev at the onset of the invasion, they would never have been prepared for civil resistance among the population. Get fucked.

  7. You know what? I’m beginning to suspect that the Russians aren’t entirely welcome there. They should leave.

  8. Sulfur in any energy drink would smell like rotten eggs. There are easier ways to poison people.

    This doesn’t pass the smell test… pun intended.

  9. It’s probably about 80% paranoia. I remember when we invaded Iraq and were constantly told never accept anything from locals no matter how friendly because it was probably poisoned. The urban legends were quite legendary. I can’t think of a single incident where that were true (though assuming it may have happened in the next 20 years at some point).

    Here, there’s probably a lot more truth, but still the paranoia is what will get you. I like it.

  10. I wonder if it hurts the feelings of Russians realising these people they came to liberate actually hate them ?

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