Vladimir Putin's Address on NATO, Ukraine, and Recognition of Donetsk and Lugansk
February 25, 2022
21 February 2022
-
Video: Vladimir Putin's Address on NATO, Ukraine, and Recognition of Donetsk and Lugansk. Complete speech in Russian with English subtitles.
EDIT February 24: A few comments have noted that the subtitles are cut off in many areas. This is due to the software I used to make the subtitles adjust for "ADA Compliance" in reading, which fixed the font at a size that cut off a lot of words and phrases. I did not realize this until only after uploading the video. Because the subtitles were made within the video before uploading to YouTube, I've had to manually embed corrected subtitles to provide for the entire text. The errors and the corrections are all mine, but I appreciate those who watched in alerting me to this.
***PLEASE REMEMBER TO CLICK THE "CC" BUTTON FOR THE CORRECTED SUBTITLES***
The US has displaced between 38-60m people across 8 countries since 2001. Keep this in mind the next time you hear US officials pledge to defend “international law,” “human rights,” or “sovereignty and territorial integrity”
It is scandalous that thousands of professors, doctors and experts were effectively silenced during the pandemic, and at the same time we hear and read nonsense about the pandemic every day by a person who became famous by assembling computers in his garage. pic.twitter.com/ekyvYXECG3
John Pilger's 'The War You Don't See' (2011) is a powerful and timely investigation into the media's role in war, tracing the history of 'embedded' and independent reporting from the carnage of World War One to the destruction of Hiroshima, and from the invasion of Vietnam to the current war in Afghanistan and disaster in Iraq. As weapons and propaganda become even more sophisticated, the nature of war is developing into an 'electronic battlefield' in which journalists play a key role, and civilians are the victims. But who is the real enemy?
0 Comments