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Толстый и тонкий


Ryan Franco

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Uvijek me inpresionira i sourcing i temeljitost srbskih novinara, čak i iz evropske kuće. NZZ :ziga: .. pa onda

Fascinantno, mora da karta okačena uz tekst ima neku grešku..

+54

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Tako je! Ja ne volim da čitam i nemam kulturu čitanja te je meni ovaj telefon nepopularan!

 

Carevo novo odelo jebote!

 

Još jednom:

 

DA LI STE NORMALNI BRE? Prvo sam pitao Zaza, sad pitam i tebe.

 

Moja pretpostavka je da niste. Zaz po forumu koji čita ne više od 500 ljudi svakodnevno radi jebeni pr za državu koja ima 15 puta više stanovnika od Srbije. 

 

Meni je zaista fascinatno i nezamislivo da je neko dao pare da se to radi. Dakle, da je neko odrešio kesu i podelio pare dokonim ludacima da agituju po opskurnim forumima. Ali ajde i to je moguće. Ako je tako, onda daj malo stila pa nemoj da kačiš sliku jebenog smartfona uz očekivanje da ćemo da ejakuliramo kao da ga prvi put vidimo i nemoj da nam pišeš da smo nepismeni što nismo ejakulirali.

 

Jel toliko teško izgraditi neki stil? Na ovom forumu makar imate hordu isprofilisanih i duhovitih trolova. Može se pokupiti fazona od njih. 

 

Ako Zaz ovo radi jer je ubeđen u neki viši ciljl, onda ništa. Mislim, sažaljevam ga i cenim da je moja pretpostavka, tj prosto ostavljena mogućnost da je lik profi spiner, otprilike najveće poštovanje koje će mu biti ikad ukazano ovde. 

McCabe,

Ne vidim razlog za tako ostar ton i vredjanje sagovornika. Ako ti se ne svidja napisano, preskoci post i gotova stvar.

 

Glede telefona koji ima ugradjen drugi ekran koji podrzava elektronske knjige, to je dizajn koji ima prodju u ruso-fonskim zemljama zato sto tamosnji ljudi mnogo vise citaju od drugih zemalja. Igrom slucaja, svojevremeno krajem 2011 i pocetkom 2012 sam radio na dizajnu prvog modela Yota telefona pa znam par detalja :) Inace, firma Yota u sebi ima puno kapitala iz SAD, tako da posmatrati njihov proizvod kao ruski proizvod bi bilo pogresno.

 

Sto se tice Rusije, po meni, pogresno je posmatratu tu zemlju kao ogromnu ko izvor svih zala ovoga sveta. Ima puno dobro i puno losih stvari tamo. Meni nisu nimalo simpaticni, one lose stvari kod njih mi vise isuvise smetaju da bih mogao tamo da zivim. To je moje misljenje i ne znaci da je objektivno.

 

Pozdrav,

X500

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 Igrom slucaja, svojevremeno krajem 2011 i pocetkom 2012 sam radio na dizajnu prvog modela Yota telefona pa znam par detalja :)

Pozdrav,

X500

 

Bravo majstore!

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Tactically, Russia is exploiting the popular dissent against the EU – fuelled by both immigration and austerity. But as rightwing movements grow in influence across the continent, Europe must wake up to their insidious means of funding, or risk seeing its own institutions subverted.

 

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/dec/08/russia-europe-right-putin-front-national-eu

 

Kao i u slucaju anti-terorizma, Snowdena i Assanga koriscenje zabrana zamo radi u koristi delegitimizovanja zapadnih vlasti.

Dok je potpuna transparentnost u finansiranju, odakle i od koga pozeljna boriti se protiv Rusa eventualnim zabranama ne samo da deligitimizuje zapadne vrednosti vec ex post legitimizuje Putinove zabrane iz slicnih motiva.

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Glede telefona koji ima ugradjen drugi ekran koji podrzava elektronske knjige, to je dizajn koji ima prodju u ruso-fonskim zemljama zato sto tamosnji ljudi mnogo vise citaju od drugih zemalja. 

 

Ovo bas i nije podrzano podacima o izdavastvu.

 

Broj novih naslova u 2013 na milion stanovnika

 

1. UK 2875

2. Taiwan 1831

3. Slovenia 1831

4. Spain 1626

5. Georgia 1547

6. Czech R 1509

...

17. Russia 699

 

E sad ovo je jedna godina pa mozda nije realna slika ali svakako ne moze biti da ljudi u Ruso-fonim zemljama "mnogo vise citaju".

Edited by Eraserhead
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moraju da čitaju ruske klasike jer vreme sporo prolazi na njihovim brzim sibirskim autoputevima

 

2n208e0.jpg

 

 

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zo290.jpg

Edited by Marcus Wulffings
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http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/dec/08/russia-europe-right-putin-front-national-eu

 

Kao i u slucaju anti-terorizma, Snowdena i Assanga koriscenje zabrana zamo radi u koristi delegitimizovanja zapadnih vlasti.

Dok je potpuna transparentnost u finansiranju, odakle i od koga pozeljna boriti se protiv Rusa eventualnim zabranama ne samo da deligitimizuje zapadne vrednosti vec ex post legitimizuje Putinove zabrane iz slicnih motiva.

 

Zasto citas i postujes ovo smece? Daj nesto sa kremaljske strane.

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Ovo oko Groznog ce se nastaviti - ne samo sledecih godina nego decenija...

 

 

 

In recent months, discussions of Russia in Washington and European capitals have focused on the Kremlin’s ongoing neoimperialist aggression against Ukraine. But Wednesday's coordinated terrorist assault on the Chechen capitol of Grozny—which left at least 20 dead and scores more injured—should refocus global attention on a problem that Russia itself increasingly is confronting: a resilient wave of radical Islam.

Indeed, the Caucasus Emirate—the notorious al Qaeda–linked terrorist group that has claimed responsibility for the brazen December offensive in Grozny—has carried out a spate of attacks over the past year, including the high-profile bombing of a train station in Volgograd on the eve of the Sochi Olympics. Russian President Vladimir Putin might claim that his country has turned a corner in its fight against terrorism, but these attacks—and the overall security situation in the North Caucasus—paint a very different picture.

And now, Russia's problem with radical Islam is poised to get much, much worse, for at least three reasons.

The first is Syria. Over the past three and a half years, the conflict between the regime of Bashar al-Assad and assorted opposition forces has steadily transformed from a civil war into an international jihad. Syria has progressively taken on Afghanistan’s old role as Islamist fighters and would-be holy warriors from North Africa, the Middle East, and Europe have flooded to the front there.

Russia's problem with radical Islam is poised to get much, much worse, for at least three reasons.

Russia is not immune from this trend. Russian counterterrorism experts estimate that there are close to 1,000 active militants fighting in the North Caucasus right now, and that, to date, some 400 or so fighters have left the Russian Federation to go fight in Syria. The latter number, they say, is made up almost entirely of new recruits—people who had not previously taken up arms. Officials in Moscow worry that, when the fires of Syria’s fast-moving holy war die down, these foreign fighters will return home and swell the ranks of the Islamist insurgency in the Caucasus by as much as a third. (Indeed, this fear goes a long way toward explaining why Russia continues to back Assad’s brutal regime. Quite simply, Moscow would much prefer Damascus do its dirty work than be forced to deal with mounting Islamic militancy at home.)

 

Second, Russia could soon become a significant theater for radical Islam’s newest poster child, the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS). Since its meteoric rise in Iraq and Syria earlier this year, the group has become a truly global threat and a beacon for disaffected radicals the world over. ISIS has received a notable level of support from militants in the North Caucasus and could soon receive much more, given the terrorist organization’s decision to start focusing on the “post-Soviet space.” This fall, Abu Omar al-Shishani, a top Islamic State commander, warned that the group would soon make its mark on Russia and the Caucasus. It might have already done so; at least some Russian analysts believe that the Grozny attack was tied to ISIS in some fashion.

 

The third trend, which underpins the other two, has to do with Russian demographics. Although Russia as a whole is beset by long-term population decline, its Muslim community is faring a good deal better. Comparatively robust birth rates have put Russia’s Muslims on track to account for 20 percent of the country’s population by the end of this decade—and much more by the middle of the century. But the ultranationalist identity embraced by Putin’s government in recent years includes little room for this swelling cohort, leaving Russia’s Muslims atomized and susceptible to the lure of radical ideologies.
 

Moscow’s response has been predictable. When it has paid attention to the problem at all, the Kremlin has tended to prefer force to finesse, repression to inclusion. The two bloody and grinding insurgencies fought by Russia’s armed forces in the North Caucasus since the early 1990s are a testament to Moscow’s preferred brand of counterterrorism.

 

The situation remains much the same today. In recent weeks, for example, local authorities in Russia’s Tatarstan region have responded to signs of renewed Islamic activism by banning certain translations of the works of the revered scholar Muhammad al-Bukhari. This move, taken without much thought to appearances, has led to charges that the Kremlin is on track to prohibit Islamic literature altogether, and done much to irritate the ummah and galvanize further opposition to the authorities, observers say. That, in turn, may lay the predicate for further governmental repression, and still greater domestic instability.
 

Western policymakers, currently focused on Russia’s actions in Ukraine and its designs on other parts of the post-Soviet space, have tended to overlook the terrorist threat confronting Russia. Yet it represents a critically important part of the puzzle, insofar as Moscow’s behavior abroad—including its efforts to reacquire Slavic lands—is at least in part a reaction to a rising religious challenge to which the Kremlin currently has no ready answer.

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moraju da čitaju ruske klasike jer vreme sporo prolazi na njihovim brzim sibirskim autoputevima

 

 

 
 
Ovi putevi su  slikani u Sibiru za vreme poplava. Ti drumovi su bili zvanično zatvoreni ali su ljudi na svoju odgovornost krenuli na put. Znam da te veseli i privlači blato ali putevi u Sibiru nisu ovakvi u normalnim uslovima.
 
Pošto ne veruješ da Rusi čitaju evo ti snimak Moskovljana u trećoj na svetu po veličini biblioteci, sa 17.5 miliona naslova. Samo analfabeta može da se ruga ruskoj pismenosti i obrazovanosti, i njihovoj ljubavi prema knjizi.
 
Edited by slow
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Ovo bas i nije podrzano podacima o izdavastvu.

 

Broj novih naslova u 2013 na milion stanovnika

 

1. UK 2875

2. Taiwan 1831

3. Slovenia 1831

4. Spain 1626

5. Georgia 1547

6. Czech R 1509

...

17. Russia 699

 

E sad ovo je jedna godina pa mozda nije realna slika ali svakako ne moze biti da ljudi u Ruso-fonim zemljama "mnogo vise citaju".

Eraser,

Ako si bio u rusko govorecim zemljama mogao si sam da vidis :)

 

Pozdrav,

X500

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