@provemewrong411 This is not a matter of “pro russia” or not.
These courageous men and women gave their life for us, the least we can do is honor them so their deaths are not in vain.
@vonderleyen Former president Rumen Radev, who has drawn comparisons to Orban, took roughly 44% of the vote.
He wants to resume Russian gas flows into Europe, improve relations with Moscow, and has opposed military support for Ukraine.
There is also Low trust in politicians
Some Bulgarians do not trust the government or large institutions to manage the transition fairly. They worry corruption or poor oversight could allow businesses to exploit the change.
End of the day people still have to go to work, and continue with their life.
@DemonHunterBG@daily_romania Many Bulgarians fear the euro could raise prices, hurt low-income people, and reduce national control over the economy.
Some also distrust politicians and want to keep the lev as part of Bulgaria’s identity.
@alfons_widmer@BRICSinfo "If Russia comes ever close to a defeat, that would mean that Russia now would use nuclear weapons and Europe would be finished physically."
This should be taken as a serious ''threat''
Dialougue is needed.
@jclarke73759694@BRICSinfo Russia = large independent nuclear power
UK = smaller independent nuclear power
Germany = no independent nuclear weapons, relies on NATO and the U.S. nuclear umbrella
The Oreshnik is a Russian intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) is nuclear-capable and designed for both conventional and nuclear strikes. Reported capabilities include:
-Range of roughly 3,500–5,500 km
-Hypersonic terminal speeds (around Mach 10 or higher)
-Multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs)
-Road-mobile launch capability
Difficult interception due to speed and maneuverability
It is something to worry about you can't say otherwise.
@jclarke73759694@BRICSinfo If you actually watch the video, you can see who he spoke to and why it’s important to at least acknowledge this information.
Be like Russia:
Russia’s tougher rules show that quick and firm action can reduce illegal stays and improve security. Europe’s slow system, long court cases, and easy appeals mean many people stay even after being told to leave. This puts pressure on housing, jobs, and public services.
Russia is strict on rule-breakers but still allows workers it needs. Europe could learn from this: make deportations faster, focus on criminals and those who break immigration rules, and work better with other countries to take people back.
There are always challenges, like fairness and the need for workers. But Russia’s results prove that stronger action gets results. European leaders should look at what works there and use similar ideas to fix their own problems.
@Saffron_Sniper1 In most european, esspecially western countries insulting the flag is a form of ''freedom of speech''.
People forget that it is a flag that many people died for.
Be proud of your flags.