Hi speaking of medical literacy for trans people, transfems pls check out the website Transfeminine Science, especially their introductory article on feminizing HRT
Non-transfems can reblog this as well btw
i don't do bad sauce passes
One Nice Bug Per Day
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if i look back, i am lost
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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@authoritankie
Hi speaking of medical literacy for trans people, transfems pls check out the website Transfeminine Science, especially their introductory article on feminizing HRT
Non-transfems can reblog this as well btw
yankee hitler no.82727622 doesnāt even know the first thing about anything in case anyone was wondering
āthe ukrainians shot up mariupolās victory day parade in 2014 in self defence from the russkis.ā <- sane & logical position according to yĆ”nki demons
on this victory day iād love to remember my great grandparents who didnāt return from the war; my great grandfather who was captured by nazis and scheduled to be executed, only to make a successful escape and join the french partisans (later, 3 years after the war ended, he will return home with medals on his chest); my great grandmother who lost both brothers and would spend the rest of her life smoking in the evenings.
Happy Victory Day! š¤š§”
i understand why liberals despise kim jong un but hes literally my friend. i know him. hes literally nice
Itās kind of wild watching how ābeing from x demographic doesnāt imbue you with any political insight, you shouldnāt be deferred to because of your identityā has been distorted by some to mean ābeing a survivor of a genocide doesnāt mean you have any unique insight into said genocideā when itās convenient. Like literally who said that. No one is saying that. Those two statements are not equivalent. Thatās a whole different sentence in fact.
Like engaging with survivor testimonies isnāt just simply ālistening to X voicesā out of a belief certain identities immutably possess intangible wisdom. It is engaging with firsthand accounts of an event youāre, ostensibly, trying to understand betterš
āChildren of Shatilaā (Lebanon, 1998) film by Mai Masri. In this scene the youth of the Palestinian refugee camp interview an elder with a video camera.
For people who actually sincerely care about imperialism and its victims there comes a time where you realize that impotently raging and penning epic take-downs of the myriad geopolitical powers is actually just worthless intellectual masturbation, and you accept that if you really want to destroy imperialism and end this cycle of suffering once and for all you need to calm down, use your head, and set aside old ossified dogmas in the interest of real liberation; so those who cling to dogma or to purely rhetorical rebellion, especially those who parrot imperial propaganda as fact in the name of "leftism" are, to me, people who do so because they just don't really care about ending imperialism, so they convince themselves that other powers are "just as bad", and they bash every successful socialist project for failing to abide by the Holy Scriptures, anything to justify continuing to abide by usamerican imperialism instead of confronting it for what it is.
unless you want to teach small kids about a laundry list of sex acts, they're not going to even recognise many acts of CSA as sexual in nature. instead, we need to have children who are raised with an expectation of bodily autonomy and who feel comfortable complaining when they're made or asked to do things they don't feel comfortable with. we need children to have the expectation that those complaints will be taken seriously and that they'll receive backup to make sure situations like that don't continue. if their desires for bodily autonomy are consistently ignored, how can we expect them to speak out when something confusing and uncomfortable happens with their parent, cousin, or babysitter? we've already taught them that what they feel comfortable with doesn't matter
I think photomatt should just give mod powers to every tboy zionist on tumblr and watch them destroy each other over fandom discourse or something. Would be a great end.
I wasn't really on tumblr yesterday, so I missed it.
Not only did photomatt post that dumb shit, not only did pr*smatic-b*ll reblog it ten fucking times with ten different polls, the Staff blog ALSO reblogged all ten of the polls.
Extremely notoriously racist, zionist, all around dumbass piece of shit, pr*smatic-b*ll, being extremely platformed by Staff. Multiple times.
Days after a huge out of nowhere banwave of trans women for literally no reason, and an extremely controversial stupid ass update right before that. This is like, what the fuck is going on here truly.
Is there another social media website that lets harassment campaigns just run off so many users like Tumblr does? It's extremely "I think you're just feeding cats to coyotes" as of late but staff is doing it on purpose at this point.
Like they've defended the bans of trans women under their 'any reason or no reason at all' catch-all but they refuse to do anything about harassers that very much are violating real TOS rules. Harassment is the ONLY report that has a character minimum to file. Blogs that get spam reported as mature have posts automatically flagged or get auto deleted. It's a whole machine set up to reward the worst people and most bigoted behaviors.
every day i wake up and another trans woman, person of color, and/or user from a global south country has had their account terminated.
and all the nazis in the #reichblr tag are still there. nazi website.
I guess Iām doing this. I do not expect anything good to come of this I donāt expect this person to listen or learn, they are using denial of the genocide of the Donchane people solely to rage bait Russians online who theyāve gotten into discourse with. I fully expect them to respond to this with accusations that itās just like Uyghurs, Holodomor, anti-Iranian propaganda etc. but it feels like it would be wrong to ignore nonetheless.
Vladimir Vasilyevich Romanenko // (68 years old), city of Selidovo // (Donetsk Peopleās Republic) // Comment by a medical worker during the inspection of the site of his familyās killing: //āIn my left hand are clearly human remains. These are ribs, fragments of bones. This is a womanās hair clip, found among a pile of burned body fragments. In my right hand I have remains of a human spinal column.ā // āRight here, on this very spot, my family was shot, and when their bodies were burned, I did not see it. They were completely burned, most likely because the Ukrainian soldier saw me run away. In my hands I have the hair clip of my daughter-in-law ā little Olechka, my daughter-in-lawās clip. She was standing right here. // At seven in the morning, I went outside to the toilet in the yard, in the garden. I went out there and heard shouting: āEveryone come out of the house.ā It was a man shouting, a Ukrainian soldier, in Ukrainian camouflage with a green stripe. He looked about 50 years old, short in height. // When they brought my family out of the house and made them stand facing the wall, he was shouting across the whole street. There were two of them. One stood a bit further away, and the other stood in such a way that I could see him very clearly. // From the side of the garage they placed my wife, then my grandson, my son ā I donāt remember exactly. Then my daughter-in-law and the matchmaker ā the daughter-in-lawās mother. My daughter-in-law started crying, saying: āWhat are you doing?ā And he just started shooting. He shot my wife first. Then he went on shooting the others. I ran away through the garden. // Later, when I came back on the 28th, I saw the bodies lying by the wall where they had been shot. But they had been burned. The next day I went, found some bags, and gathered the remains. Where it had burned, I covered the remains. Everything that was there, I collected into five bags and buried them here under the entrance to my building. We buried five people ā five bags that remained ā my family. Years of birth: 1951, 1955, 1978, 1974, and 1991.ā
[machine translated]
Vladimir Nikolaevich Pogorelov // city of Selidovo // (Donetsk Peopleās Republic) // āI was buying milk in Voroshilovka. An old man asked Ukrainian soldiers: āBoys, when the Russians come, how will we live with them?ā One of them, the biggest one, turned and said: āGrandpa, donāt be afraid of the Russians ā be afraid of us.ā He said: āWe have 600 guns; when we leave, weāll wipe Selidovo out.ā Since 2015 theyāve been promising to wipe us out. Ukrainian soldiers personally told my mother twice, and almost all women: āWhen we leave, weāll wipe Selidovo off the face of the earth.ā But I stayed so it wouldnāt be wiped out. // Near shop No. 56, people used to gather to buy things. A mortar shell hit there once ā no one was killed. A week later, people gathered again. I was thinking of going in the morning to buy mineral water but decided to go after noon. My godfather Alexei and my friend Gena went there to buy meat. Around ten oāclock a shell hit ā four people were wounded. A woman had her kidney torn out, Gena had his leg pierced and an artery severed. A fragment got stuck and wasnāt removed. My godfather Alexei Vanin also had his leg pierced through and a graze to the head. Ukraine was firing. SeptemberāOctober. // In September, near the Revino bridge, I went to feed dogs. Ukrainian soldiers lived three houses down. When they left, they simply threw a grenade into the house. It caught fire and burned for two days because people were afraid it might be mined. // Or on Ostrovsky Street ā a soldier came out from two houses down. Three minutes later, the house exploded. // Refugees from Peski and Pervomaisk were living in the childrenās hospital. Ukrainian soldiers came, inspected the building, saw where people were living, collected all the fire extinguishers, and left. About six hours later, a strike hit ā from Ostrovsky Street. It hit exactly where the refugees were living. There were no fire extinguishers, nothing to put out the fire. Those who survived gathered and fled further into Ukraine. // Russian troops were not there yet. They entered on Thursday around 2 p.m. On Tuesday, Ukrainian soldiers entered house No. 19, in front of mine. They went around breaking doors and shooting everyone they found. Anyone who opened the door was shot in the head. An 80-year-old grandmother, a lifelong teacher, was shot in the head. Everyone there was shot in the head. Three people survived ā one didnāt manage to open the door, another barricaded himself and heard French and Ukrainian speech. A Frenchman said something, and a Ukrainian replied: āWe donāt have time to break doors anymore. Weāve already cleared it.ā They left him alive because they had no time. // On Wednesday, someone with a Georgian accent walked through our yard shouting: āIs anyone alive?ā He reached my building. I was about to answer when he started swearing. I gathered the residents ā six of us ā to decide whether to open. We decided not to, since he was swearing. We waited for someone more polite. That was Wednesday ā he was deliberately looking for civilians to kill. // In our building, they took a family of five, including a child, out into the yard and shot them. Ukrainian soldiers. // Snipers were placed here, and starting Tuesday they shot all the men. One ran into a shop ā the sniper shot him there. His body is still lying there. // At the intersection, bodies lie in a row. All were shot in the head. Around this house, all the men were shot by Ukrainian snipers, maybe mercenaries. // A son came from a nearby street, saw his father lying dead, and ran home for shovels. While running, a sniper shot him in the head. He didnāt manage to bury his father.ā
[machine translated]
Valentina Yevgenyevna Vasilkonova, city of Selidovo (Donetsk Peopleās Republic) // āOn October 21, the Ukrainian Armed Forces were retreating. We were standing by the entrance, and they started shooting. We heard Ukrainian speech: āCome here, come here.ā We ran and scattered into the entrances. My front door was shot through. I ran inside quickly, and a Ukrainian soldier shouted: āShe ran over there.ā And they shot through my door ā thereās still a hole in it to this day. // They also fired at the building across from us, number 12. We ran inside, but people were standing in entrance number 12 across the way. They locked the entrance. The Ukrainian soldiers said: āOpen up, open up, nothing will happen to you.ā Aunt Valya opened it, and they shot the four of them. They hadnāt done anything. Lena was just sitting on the couch. They shot her. They shot her son, asking why he wasnāt fighting. They shot Sasha. Aunt Valya started screaming, and they shot her too. Lena said: āWhat are you doing?ā One of the soldiers said: āWhat should we do with her?ā Another said: āJust finish her.ā And they did.
A boy, Kolya, ran in. He lived nearby and had heard the shooting. He ran over, and they shot him too. Four people at once. Then they stayed in that apartment ā about twelve of them. A young man living across saw everything through the window. They shot up his windows. // One man came out to surrender, and they shot him. He was lying near the entrance. In our Solnechny district, six people are lying dead. A woman was walking with a bag ā a Ukrainian soldier shot her. Once, twice, three times. My neighbor Sasha told me: the soldier shot her three times. At first she started moving, and the soldier said: āOh, youāre still moving?ā and shot again. āWaiters, waiters, waitersā ā thatās all we heard from them. // Sashaās kitchen windows were shot up because they were firing. His door was shot too. My door was shot in the first entrance, his in the second. // When they were retreating, they shot at us. Itās good I hid⦠They opened the entrance and shot at the doors because they saw me running. Thank God they didnāt come into the apartment. If they had come in // In the neighboring house, a woman was feeding cats. Aunt Lena was 75 ā they shot her. And Kirillovna, a Ukrainian language teacher, was running, made it into the entrance, but a soldier caught up with her and shot her. A 75-year-old woman feeding cats ā why shoot her? // Those who write comments to me, those who left, say: āIt canāt be Ukraine, Ukraine didnāt touch us when we lived there.ā But I stayed ā I know it was Ukraine. // How do you prove that it was Ukraine who killed, and not Russia? Russia came ā did they shoot us? No, on the contrary, they help us. They ask if we have food. We say we have everything, thank you. They help ā they even brought me firewood. // My son also died on the 21st. He and Ruslan, a friend, and Seryozha went to a house on Ostrovskaya Street, 18, to drop off a friend. They arrived, got out ā and Ukrainian soldiers were still sitting across from them. On the 22nd they had already reached our Solnechny district. It was around 10:30 at night. The soldiers said to them: āWhy are you driving around?ā ā āWe brought a friend,ā Aunt Valya told me, Seryozha Sklyarās mother. They kept asking: āWhy are you driving around?ā // When I was burying my son, neighbors told me the soldiers had been drunk, they started picking on the boys, asking: āWhy arenāt you fighting?ā I donāt know how it happened. They shot up the car ā itās still there by the house, riddled with bullets. Then they killed Seryozha. They carried him and laid him down. While they were carrying him, the soldiers were shooting at my son, Yevgeny Kirilenko. Aunt Valya said: āI started treating my son ā his leg and arm were shot.ā // Then Zhenya went outside ā a dog started whining. The soldiers had already shot the dog. He went out to it, and at around 10:30 at night they shot him near the dog. Then a soldier told Aunt Valya: āLook what theyāre doing in that house.ā She said: āThereās no one left ā youāve already killed them all.ā And my son was lying there, dead. He hadnāt done anything. They werenāt rude, they didnāt argue, they didnāt say anything. They killed him simply for āwhy arenāt you fighting,ā for supposedly waiting for Russia. // Aunt Valya didnāt even hear our boys respond ā they stayed silent. Then the soldiers came back and finished him off, in case he was still alive. Aunt Valya started screaming: āWhat are you doing, you butchers? Youāve already killed my son and now youāre killing him too.ā They didnāt touch Ruslan at first ā he was the one bandaging him. // In the morning, when Ruslan tried to go out, the soldiers, while retreating, shot him too. So three people died at once. // Then the soldiers came here to our Solnechny district. So many people were killed here ā bodies were lying around.
[machine translated]
Sergey Gennadievich Boenko, city of Selidovo (Donetsk Peopleās Republic) // āDuring their retreat, the Ukrainian Armed Forces were simply shooting everyone they came across. They went into apartment entrances, knocked on doors, broke down wooden doors, and shot those who opened them. On October 22, during the retreat, sometime after one oāclock, we heard intense automatic gunfire. // On the morning of the 23rd, I looked out the window and saw a dead man near entrance No. 6 of building 77 on Mikhaylovskaya Street. I went to the former āSolnechnyā shop and also saw a dead person on the corner. As it turned out, it was the neighbor of Sergey from the nearby building. He was killed on the corner of the building. // Neighbors saw that our neighbor had been killed. She was lying near the āKoloritā shop. Within a radius of one hundred meters from my brotherās apartment, I saw eight dead people. Valya ā a neighbor from the first entrance ā I buried her between the building and the shop. // Further on, near building 77, by the first entrance near the sidewalk, I saw two dead men of elderly age. Another dead person was near the sixth entrance. Near the āSolnechnyā shop, at the left corner of the store, lay Sergey Kasimov. At the right corner, behind the former āSoyuzpechatā kiosk, there was another dead man. Behind the shops on the boulevard on the former Shchorsa Street (it was renamed under Ukrainian authorities), there was another man. And near building 12, by the first entrance, there was a dead man. // Another dead person lay near the turn by the house, near a concrete sewer cover. A second lay on the corner of that shop. A third man lay dead further down the sidewalk below the shop. One of them had been covered with something ā he was about seventy years old. I had seen him alive several times before. // Varvara Sadchikova, a resident of the buildingās first entrance, was killed about ten meters from here. I buried her on the 30th. She used to walk, loved dogs. She had dogs. She went out walking and was killed on the 22nd. // Near the second school there is a small-family dormitory building with a savings bank attached to it. Near the first entrance, right by a bench, there was a dead man lying there. Apparently, local residents had already covered him with something. Thatās what I saw. // The Ukrainian Armed Forces also killed my former colleague from the mine, Volodya Borisov. At the intersection with Shevchenko Street. He was killed there in the same way as the others, during the retreat. You canāt call them soldiers⦠theyāre monsters. They killed everyone indiscriminately. He was also killed. He had gone to fetch water, and they shot him there. // Why were they killed? Iāll tell you my view. Since 1991, there has been this rise of the Bandera narrative ā that Bandera is a hero, that all those who were in the SS āGaliciaā division were actually fighting for Ukraine and did not kill civilians, and so on. But in reality, from the history we learned in Soviet school, we all know. // For ātrueā Ukrainians now, the dream is to āruleā ā to dominate, to reign. Not through their own work, but by exploiting others ā us, the eastern people.ā
[machine translated]
ā¼ļø I do not speak English. If you want to double check the translation I suggest running it through DeepL, Yandex or Google translate ā¼ļø
Nikolai Vasilievich Glukhanich, // city of Kurakhovo (Donetsk Peopleās Republic) // āOn December 19, 2024, I went out to take out the trash and on the way wanted to pick up a few more pieces of firewood from some broken wood. And Ukrainians dropped a drone on me near the second entrance, where the trash is off to the side, behind our building.
I have five fragments in me. In my temple, here on my arm thereās still a strong mark, and in my thigh. Where the temple is, you can clearly see it. If you want, I can take it off and show you how my shoulder was torn apart. // I was wearing this padded jacket, this quilted coat. It tore through it. It went from bottom to top. And right into the templeācan you imagine, two centimeters from the eye or so. It tore the hood, tore everything, and it was all very painful. Also here in the shin, in the leg. In total, five fragments. Theyāre small. They fired once. I already jumped into the entrance, and then a second timeāthe second drop was stronger. That is, they were finishing me off. // Another time before that, I was fixing doors in this entrance where I live. I reacted to the sound. When it hitāwell, I managed to sit down in the entrance. My arm was hitāvery strong, like by some kind of pellet. Extremely strong, like after a blow. Very, very painful. // They knew civilians lived here, knew we were civilians, saw that we were trying to clean around the houseāthey were watching us very closely. And they struck deliberately. They knew we were civilians. // Before me, the Terekhov family was injured. They went for water or firewood, and the son went first, around nine in the morning. I think he went for water; there was frost then, this was December 15, and he couldnāt get any. We were collecting water from a drainage outletāit was closer and safer. But he probably went to the base where there were supplies of bottled water. Then his mother goesāheās still not backāand she went to look for him. // I live on the fourth floor, I hear her shouting: āPeople, help!ā And sheās crawling there, along that alley behind the bank, crawling and rolling over. My God! I went out, started looking for people; a man from that building helped, and another one here. We found a blanket, pulled her out, then we see Sergeyāher sonācrawling too. She had a wound in her lower back and, I think, in the right leg, above the knee. And the son had an open fracture in the right shin. A terrible open fractureāthe bone was sticking out. // She went to look for him after two or three hours. And they themselves were crawling and rolling, covering about half a kilometer like that. We dragged them maybe 100ā150 metersānot much. With the fracture we just put on splints. It was December. // The drone knew that only civilians lived here. Itās bad, very bad. Ukrainians were finishing off their own. Then they started firing at our building. The windows are broken; I had just patched them up. It was coming from the direction of Dachnoye, where Ukraine was positioned. // They fired to the point that some kind of projectile flew ināI donāt know what itās called, I still have the casing from it. It flew into the room, smashed thingsāseven through-holes in the kitchen, then it went through the bathroom, the storage room, then into the living room. About 30 holes in total, some through, some not. // Near the church, a young guy was injured. He lay in the basement for a month. He was also hit by a Ukrainian droneāhe had been going for water, or they were feeding people in the church basement. He lived in that basement for a month and died near the church, somewhere there he was buried. His name was Viktor. // Others lived on Engels Street, and they had some kind of conflict with Ukrainian soldiers: āWhy arenāt you leaving the city?ā And they were simply shot. I think they were pensionersāa man and a woman, maybe just below retirement age. It was Ukrainian soldiers who shot them. // Another man livedāhe also had some kind of conflict with Ukrainian soldiersāthey threw a grenade under his feet. His surname was Osipovich, in Yuzhny, thatās what I was told. Around 45 years old. // I wanted to go to church for Christmas. Ukrainians were dropping charges from drones, like mines, watching us from drones and striking like with mines. I couldnāt even go to church for Christmas.ā
[machine translated]
Vitaliy Viktorovich Kolesnik, city of Kurakhovo (Donetsk Peopleās Republic // āPeople tried at night to run to a safe place, to the village of Krasnoye. They said they were shot at, struck by dronesābasically, people were being killed. They were heading toward Donetsk, that is, toward the Russian troops. They were looking for safety, running there, running toward the Russian forces. And these enemiesāāNaziā Ukrainian soldiersāwere firing at them, not letting them get there. // At some point people were looking for water. Thereās the Vorsovskaya base here; there used to be a warehouse with water thereāpacks, maybe 19-liter ones, around ten of them. Some water remained, and people went there looking for it. Ukrainian drones attacked them. Many civilian bodies were lying right on the road. I even know the surname of one young guyāTerekhovāwho was injured. A drone attacked him and damaged his legs. He started crawling. There was no one around. Then he rolled along near the highway, along the roadside with his injured legs. Eventually he crawled somewhere to a house and shouted for help. Apparently people heard him and pulled him out. And his mother was waiting for him. Her name was Valentina, may she rest in peace. She went to look for him, and a drone attacked her too. Somehow people carried them into a basement. But the mother couldnāt be savedāshe died. Valentina Terekhova.
[machine translated]
Aleksandr Dmitrievich Chotiy, city of Kurakhovo (Donetsk Peopleās Republic) // āOn December 20, 2024, my neighbor and I were living in a basement. We needed to go down into the cellar for household needsāget some potatoes, maybe some preserved food. We went behind the house and heard a drone flying in from the west. It flew behind the house, seemed like it kept going. // The cellar is very closeāabout five meters from the house. My neighbor was going down into the cellar, and I was standing nearby. Literally a second later, the drone came back and dropped something. // I fell. I couldnāt move because I realized a nerve in my thigh had been severedāin my right leg, and also in my left, it hit my toe and foot. // There was a man, Aleksandr Nikolayevich Kutsuvalov, born in 1980. A Ukrainian drone was specifically hunting him and two other people, dropped something on them, and he was also wounded. He lived at 10 Komsomolsky Avenue, apartment 20. // Ukrainian forces want to inflict maximum damage on the local residents who stayed here. They believe that those who stayed are āwaiters,ā meaning they are waiting for the āRussian world.ā Most likely, that is whyāto cause as much harm as possible to the local population.ā
[machine translated]
Igor Aleksandrovich Kamenetsky, city of Kurakhove (Donetsk Peopleās Republic) // āOn October 30, 2024, it was my fatherās birthday. I congratulated him, then went to pass on greetings to a neighbor. We were with him in the garage, at 85 Michurina Street. // Two Ukrainian soldiers came in; with them was Andrey Bitner, born in 1976. They made us lie on the floor. I was struck on the head from above with a foot. When they entered the garage, they said: āWhy didnāt you evacuate, you waiters.ā Basically, it was all āwaiters, waiters, waiters.ā // They told us to lie face down. I was face down, and they kicked me in the back of the head with boots. Vova was shot in the arm. One of them asked about the carāwhether it worked or not, what condition it was in, whether there was gasoline or not. They got in and drove away. // A second one stayed with us. The Ukrainian servicemen put us in a pit, back to back, made us take off our outer clothing, and took off our shoes. // One soldier continued: what are you doing here, translate from Ukrainian to Russian, from Russian to Ukrainian, do you know Ukrainian? // They forced us to sing the anthem. One told me to move toward the gate, press my head down, hands upāand a shot rang out. I saw Andrey slump to the side. // Another Ukrainian soldier came in. He said: āIām here for you.ā They made me lie face down on the ground again. Again, questions: what are you doing here, what are you waiting for? // There was also a question from the second soldier to the first one who came in. He said: āWhy did you kill that one?ā And he replied: āI didnāt want to guard two.ā // Then another one told me: āGet up and run.ā I said: where? āTo Dnipropetrovsk.ā I ran to the turn, went around the corner to a neighbor. I asked for shoes, clothes, something to throw on.ā
[machine translated]
ā¼ļø I do not speak English. If you want to double check the translation I suggest running it through DeepL, Yandex or Google translate ā¼ļø
Sergey Konstantinovich Andreev, city of Kurakhove (Donetsk Peopleās Republic) // āWhen the Ukrainian shelling began, we, of course, suffered greatly from it. Many were wounded, and there were deaths. // Acquaintances were returning home during curfew and saw that a Ukrainian unit was standing by a tank, and the commander was giving them orders: three shots at the city, two at the Kurakhove thermal power plant. // Our workers at the power plant tried in every possible way to provide heat and electricity to the city. But the Ukrainians hindered this. // Our mayor, whose surname is Padun, worked at the power plant and knew where to direct mortar fire, where it would hit most painfully so that it would take longer to repair. // And thatās why the Ukrainian military fired precisely at the transformer substation. As soon as smoke came out of the power plantās chimney, shelling would begin. This was the first sign that people had restored the plantās operation and started up the units to provide heat and electricity. // Mayor Padun knew exactly where to strike. According to rumors, he even gave instructions to the directorāseveral directors changed at the plant during that periodāto stop supplying heat, preserve the equipment, and evacuate all workers. // There were many collapses during the shelling, with people trapped under the rubble. There were many injuries, including shrapnel wounds. // The director of our lyceum was also affected in the same way. A strike hit while she was at home. In the kitchen, part of the window was blown out by the blast wave, and that fragment killed her. // Whenever shelling occurred, for some reason none of the Ukrainian soldiers suffered. They were warned in advance, and only civilians suffered. // There were many injuries. On my younger daughterās birthday, a strike landed nearby. One woman was killed and another was seriously wounded. People were simply sitting on a bench when the Ukrainian shelling happened. // Later, drones appeared hereāthere were so many that it seemed like a swarm of bees. It was incredibly loud; they fell, exploded, and dropped payloads. Our apartment was damaged. It was a so-called āBaba Yagaā drone. // We live on the fifth floor; in one room there is basically no ceiling anymore. The Ukrainian āBaba Yagaā drone is one of the larger ones. We somehow learned to hide all the time. // Ukrainian troops did not reach our basement, but in the neighboring building they did and even took people hostage. People were sitting in the basement, and they drove them up to the first and second floors to use them as human shields. // I heard this from conversations with an acquaintance of mine who was in that basement.ā
[machine translated]
Alexander Anatolyevich Machula and Elena Vladimirovna Machula, Kurakhove (Donetsk Peopleās Republic) // āOn the first floor of our building lived a disabled man of the third category, Nikolai Ivanovich Samokhval, 57 years old. A support group of the Ukrainian Armed Forces came and killed him on December 23, sometime between 11 p.m. and midnight. Those who saw the body said there was a hematoma on the back of his skull. I understand it was a blow from a rifle butt. // One of four Ukrainian soldiers killed him. Four Ukrainian soldiers came to support those who were in the cooperative building and the House of Culture. The most brutal and stubborn among them had the callsign āDen,ā Dima. I didnāt let them into the entrance at first, but as soon as they got in, he pointed his rifle at me and said: āIf you, old man, stop me from passing one more time, Iāll shoot you.ā //They threatened us, saying that when the Russians come, theyāll slaughter all of you. They said Russians eat dogs and cats, and that we are not people to them. // They stole property. Right in front of us, a Ukrainian soldier, about 20 years old, opened a wardrobe in the apartment oppositeāa two-room flat. He told me he couldnāt wait to turn 18 to sign a contract with the Ukrainian army; he wanted to fight. He tore off a very strong lock, rummaged through drawers, and anything he foundāhe put in his pocket if it was valuable. // We all watched this in our entrance. We saw them breaking doors open without any hesitation, using crowbars. On the second floor, they fired several rounds from a 5.45 mm rifle while breaking down a door. // They arrived on December 19, 2024, around noon, and locked us in from the outside. They used us as a shieldāI insist on that. I told them: āWhat are you doing, guys? You canāt do this.ā // Below us, they broke down the door of our neighbor Shanin. There was a sniper on the first floor beneath us, and a grenade launcher operatorāthe same āDen.ā They didnāt let us go anywhere. We couldnāt even go for waterāwe didnāt have water even to flush the toilet. // We used to go to a well under building 2V, but the Ukrainians locked us in. We cooked outside, and when I brought boiling water in, a Ukrainian soldier locked us inside with our own key. For three days, they didnāt let us out at all.
They left on December 23. I heard the key turn in the lockāthatās when we were finally able to go into the entrance. // The Ukrainians used drones a lot. They attacked us personally twice. We were walking from our damaged house, carrying some potatoes along Mechnikov Street, when a Ukrainian drone attacked us. Luckily, it got caught in the branches of a tree near the House of Culture. // The Ukrainian soldiers saw that civilians were walking. I was wearing a padded jacket, and my wife was wearing one too. We were carrying bags, and they still launched a drone at us. // They strike civilians so that we would talk less about what they were doing. Ukrainian soldiers believed that those who stayed here were already separatists, no longer Ukraine. They said to us: āWhat, are you waiting for the tricolors? Waiting for the Russian army?ā // They openly showed their hatred. They said: āYouāll see. Do you think things will be good here?ā // I didnāt let the Ukrainian drone operators into the basement. There were eight of us thereāmostly elderly women, and me as the only relatively able man, plus Kolya, the disabled man. A Ukrainian soldier fired a burst over my head and said: āWhat, arenāt you afraid?ā I replied that Iād already had my share of fear when I served in the army. // One neighbor disappearedāVitya Shuminsky from the second floor. Russian troops werenāt even nearby yet, but we were shelled every night by the Ukrainians for two months straight with mortars. // They would drive out from the stadium in a pickup truck with a mortar in the back, followed by another vehicle, probably with ammunition. They fired at the city, at kindergartens. One time they left at 11 p.m. and fired until morning, hitting whatever they could. Another time, at 6 p.m., already dark, four mortars started firing. The Russians werenāt even in Maksimilianovka yet. // The Ukrainians had a motto: āWhat is not Ukraine is ruins.ā And they destroyed all the infrastructure themselves. // We even knowāthe city mayor, many people can confirm thisāordered the Ukrainian military what to bomb. // They hit schools, kindergartens, residential buildings, the shopping center, the post office. Pensioners remained in the city and received pensions at the post office. When people gathered there, they struck it and destroyed it. // They didnāt spare their own people. Shelters meant for civilians were given to the military. Humanitarian aid was often divided and stolen, while people were given only simple pasta and flour. // As for Russian speakersāthey hated us terribly. I wanted to charge a flashlight from a Ukrainian soldier; he took the charger and broke it. He himself was from Ternopil, 20 years old, named Bohdan. They were from Ternopil, Ivano-Frankivsk, Rivne regions. // They also killed Gennadyāwe knew him from work. He was a year older than us, 68. He saw Ukrainian soldiers appear in the neighboring entrance, and since he was a smoker and cigarettes were scarce, he said: āIāll run over and ask themāeven buy one.ā He knocked on the basement door. It was terribleāthey dragged him in and killed him. Only his hat remained. His wife lived on the fifth floor but never found the body. // I stored firewood in the seventh entrance for the stove. I noticed packages from pills appearing near my wood, and they were cooking something in a potāsome foul-smelling orange substance. Most likely drugs. Those were definitely narcotic pills. // Later I went for firewood, and on the first floor the door was open. In fact, all doors up to the fifth floor were open. In one apartment on the first floor, I saw a dead Ukrainian soldier sitting in a chair. I looked and left, never went back. // Later, when Russian soldiersāour guys, sappersāarrived, they checked it. They said: āDonāt go into that apartment on the right, where the Ukrainian soldier is sitting in the chairāitās mined. Not only his body, but an explosive device is connected to a water canteen next to him. Thereās half a canteen of drinking water thereādonāt touch it. The Ukrainians mined their own soldierās body.āā
[machine translated]
Tatyana Ivanovna Lazko, Kurakhove (Donetsk Peopleās Republic): // āFive houses in a row caught fire. There was Ukrainian shelling of those houses. We already more or less understand what is flying where and from where. // One person was dug out from under the rubble. The relatives took them away somewhere else in the city. // When I went the next dayāmy sister has an apartment thereāI went there, and those Ukrainian soldiers were shouting: āIn 10 days all the houses will be like this, all the houses will be burning.ā This was in November 2024. // They burned it downāI think it was a show for those who stayed here. Like a visual example, a lesson for those who remained in the city. From the Ukrainian side.ā
[machine translated]
Anton Vladimirovich Savich, city of Vuhledar (Donetsk Peopleās Republic // āThroughout all this time, the Ukrainiansāwell, there was constant fire, they were shooting from everywhere. They were firing from the west. // The shelling was constant. Sometimes it was even hard to sleepāthree years of continuous shelling. Visually, we saw that they were Ukrainian nationalists. // Here, near the school entrance, a vehicle arrived. There was foodāhumanitarian aid, water, grains, porridge in boxes. These were chaplains, from Christian churches. āLetās pray, letās pray,ā they said. The vehicle drove off, and immediately shells started landing. The metal door was riddled like a sieveāyou could even take it off, itās completely shot through. A man and I often played chess there. // Local residents were killed and torn apart by the shells and explosions. Here are the graves. We buried people wherever we couldāon a garbage site, wherever possible. I personally buried Ruslan at the very beginning. Denis is buried here, then Andrey. Igorās wrestling coachājust about half a year agoācame out of his basement, and a shell landed, tearing him apart. // Ruslan died two years ago, at the very beginning, down by the exit near the bus stop of the first mineāthatās where his grave is. // There was a barrel at the corner near āVector.ā We used to go there for water. Four people were blown to piecesāflesh was scattered everywhere. And there were many such cases, just from shelling.ā
[machine translated]
I heard that the translated testimonies had some minor translation errors and readability issues, but I figured these ones were okay.
ā¼ļø I do not speak English. If you want to double check the translation I suggest running it through DeepL, Yandex or Google translate ā¼ļø
Yulia Viktorovna Yayno, a witness to crimes of the Kyiv regime in the city of Mariupol // (Donetsk Peopleās Republic) // āUkrainians from āAzovā abducted girls, raped them, // and abused them in all kinds of perverse ways. // They injected construction foam into womenās internal organs. // These are not people ā they are beasts.ā
machine translated
Sorry, I'm spending the least amount of time on this section because it turned out to be the most difficult for me.
I was unable to find the original Russian text of these testimonies.
https://democracyfund.ru/userfiles/Doklad%20Krasnoarmeysk.pdf
https://democracyfund.ru/userfiles/CRIMES%20OF%20THE%20KIEV%20REGIME%20AGAINST%20WOMEN%20AND%20CHILDREN-Rus.pdf
https://democracyfund.ru/userfiles/Military%20Crimes2.pdf
The latest official figures on civilian deaths in LPR-controlled Lugansk date back to 2023 and put the number at at least 3,169. The most recent figures on civilian deaths in DPR-controlled Donetsk do not include casualties from mass killings in cities under Ukrainian control, but only civilian casualties in separatist/Russian-controlled Donbass as a result of Ukrainian attacks on civilians. The total death toll stands at 13,108. However, the Human Rights Commissioner for Lugansk, Anna Soroka, estimates the death toll in Lugansk at 6,000. This brings the total to 16,000. This figure does not include casualties from mass killings, drone strikes, airstrikes, shelling, etc. in Donetsk (I'm not sure if Soroka included the Ukrainian-controlled LPR in her estimate) when it was under Ukrainian control, and I don't think that includes, at least on the DPR side, the dead found later in mass graves, of which there were many. This means that, if we were to stay on the safe side, a reasonable estimate of the civilian death toll in Donbas would be 17,000, but most estimates point to 20,000 deaths.
This is the most exhausting, sickly, and painful section for me, and it could be a video essay in itself. I've selected several examples of high-ranking Ukrainian politicians and military leaders to illustrate Ukraine's intent to commit genocide. This is by no means an exhaustive overview.
There is of course our current Head of the Office of the President of Ukraine and former Chief of the Main Directorate of Intelligence of Ukraine, Lieutenant general Kyrylo Oleksiiovych Budanov of āDonāt continue with that topic. All I will comment on is that weāve been killing Russians and we will keep killing Russians anywhere on the face of this world until the complete victory of Ukraine.ā and openly supporting Nation Europa fame. Who is Nation Europa I wonder? Well itās difficult to find out now because the Wikipedia page has been taken down, but I managed to dig it up on Internet Archive
Huh, thereās a lot of Ukrainian Armed Forces battalions who operate in Donbass in that member list But belonging to an international alliance of Russophobic Ukrainian nationalist neo-Nazis does not necessarily imply genocidal intent. Take, for example, one of the alliance's founders, Svoboda, one of Ukraine's five leading political parties. Several of their paramilitaries have become part of the Ukrainian army, such as the Sich Battalion, formed in 2014 by Svoboda to fight in Donbass and still fighting in Donbass under the name the 4th Sich Company of the Kyiv Regiment and under the watchful eye of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, I am certain they have never said anything that amounted to genocidal intent against the people of Donbass.
Whoops⦠Well at least sheās never been officially endorsed by the Ukrainian Government!
Oh
Who was Mr. "we will keep killing Russians anywhere on the face of this world" replacing as the honourable head of the Ukrainian presidential office? Well that would be Andriy Borysovych Yermak, who while having left the presidentās office, remains a member of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine, member of the Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief and Chief of staff of the Coordination Headquarters for Humanitarian and Social Affairs. Yermak, during his tenure as the Head of Office for Zelensky, once said, āRussians, these inhumans, have no right to be among civilized citizens of Western countries at all.ā and āThe Russians will pay for all the victims of the Holodomor and will be held accountable for todayās crimes. This will be a historic moment of reckoning. It is already awaiting the Russian nation.ā and āThe entire Russian nation will be punished for the evil for which it is responsible. It will not be possible to avoid punishment.ā You get the idea, he talks a lot.
There's also Poroshenko's infamous speech, in which he says Ukraine will win the war by depriving the residents of Donbass of pensions, jobs, education support, and safety (our children will go to schools and kindergartens, while their children will live in basements/bomb shelters).
Ukraineās former Minister of Social Policy Andriy Oleksiyovych Reva said about the people of Donbass: āEveryone who was pro-Ukrainian has left. And those who want to receive two pensions, one here and one here, let them endure. I don't feel sorry for them at all. I feel sorry for those soldiers and officers and their families who were killed there for these scum.ā
Oleg Livanchuk, the head of the Krasnogorsk city military-state administration, said of the residents of the Donetsk Region city: "ā¦And the television here is only Russian. That's why the people here are weak-willed. Plus, there's a large percentage of stupid people here⦠It's a neutral territory between two states, where marginalized people and criminals were exiled. And you can't change genes. A lot is born in the genes. That's your gene pool."
Semen Ihorovych Semenchenko, founder and commander of the 2nd Special Forces Battalion famous for their war crimes of the National Guard "Donbas", as well as former First Deputy Chairperson of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine Committee on National Security and Defence said in 2019 āIn my understanding, Ukraine should have a strategy to depopulate Donbass. But despite the terrifying name, there's nothing genocidal about it⦠It's necessary to extract all labor resources from the occupied territories.ā He was a recipient of the Order of Bohdan Khmelnytsky, third class, from the President of Ukraine and received a Makarov pistol from the head of the Security Service of Ukraine
There was also the instances of Ukraine attempting to stop COVID 19 vaccines from entering Donbass in the middle of the Pandemic, and the Ukrainian Government softly calling to an end to funding of the Russian Red Cross because it operates in Russian controlled Donbass, where the Ukrainian Red Cross cannot enter, effectively depriving the Donbass region of the Red Cross all together.
Gee, I wonder why, after spending time in anti-Russian circles, you fell for Ukrainian nationalist propaganda? It's a complete mystery. (I'm also intrigued by the idea of āāresponding to accusations of being a "Tumblrpilled" by saying I get my political views not exclusively from a Nazi website, but from a turbo-Nazi one.) You are less intelligent then a dog
My mother needs urgent surgery, and weāre still missing $600⦠She is dying in front of me while I stand here unable to save her. What are you waiting for to help? Do you want me to come back and say I lost her? Please donāt let it reach that point donate or share before itās too late. Donate here PayPal Verified fundraiser
Satellite imagery confirms that the regime demolished the church in Artsakhās former capital city of Stepanakert.
The sustained threats to Armenian religious and cultural heritage across Artsakh (also known as Nagorno-Karabakh) have reached a new level following reports that the Azerbaijani regime has razed another prominent church in the region. Satellite imagery obtained by Caucasus Heritage Watch (CHW) confirmed that the Holy Mother of God Church, which stood in the former capital city of Stepanakert, was demolished within the last eight weeks. The Artsakh Tourism and Cultural Development Agency shared the news of the churchās destruction on social media on Tuesday, April 21, only three days before the 111th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. Though the agency did not share photos of the demolition in its notice, CHWās researchers were able to pinpoint supporting photographic evidence within a day by pulling images from the Sentinel-2 satellite from March 3 and April 2. [...]
Satellite imagery depicts the changes to the landscape where the Holy Mother of God Church stood in Stepanakert. (image courtesy Caucasus Heritage Watch)
Azerbaijan has demolished Stepanakertās Holy Mother of God Cathedral, the second church destroyed in one week, as the cultural genocide targ
YEREVAN ā A few days before the 111th commemoration of the Armenian Genocide, a new act of destruction has drawn sharp condemnation from cul