Putin quarantines youngsters for two weeks before telling ‘bum’ jokes

Putin quarantines youngsters for two weeks before telling ‘bum’ jokes


Putin’s legs quiver erratically as the Covid-paranoid Russian leader brainwashes kids on Ukraine after a two-week quarantine.
Yesterday, Vladimir Putin spoke with high-achieving students in Kaliningrad. The covid-wary leader quarantined them for two weeks prior.

Putin ordered each of the high-achieving children to quarantine from Covid for two weeks before the meeting in Kaliningrad

Putin ordered each of the high-achieving children to quarantine from Covid for two weeks before the meeting in Kaliningrad


Putin writhed in his chair and seemed uneasy as he grabbed one armrest fiercely.
He offered the students a distorted account of Russian history and made an odd joke.

The Russian leader squirmed in his chair and looked ill at ease as he tightly gripped an armrest with one hand

Covid-paranoid Vladimir Putin’s knees trembled erratically as he ordered the isolation of kids for two weeks before to his brainwashing conference in Kaliningrad yesterday.

Putin writhed in his chair and seemed uncomfortable as he forcefully held an armrest with one hand and a microphone with the other as he attempted to impress upon his youthful audience the need of discipline.APRIL 21: Putin is seen gripping his desk with his right hand while meeting with Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu in the early stages of the war. The footage from the meeting raised questions about Putin's health

APRIL 21: Putin is seen gripping his desk with his right hand while meeting with Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu in the early stages of the war. The footage from the meeting raised questions about Putin's health

It is the latest video proof of the Russian dictator’s deteriorating health, which many observers attribute to Parkinson’s disease.

The Russian leader emphasized the need of teaching a version of history sanctioned by the Kremlin to the chosen high IQ students.

The health-conscious president, who has been tormented by rumors about a variety of different diseases in recent years, took special steps to avoid contracting Covid, since the number of reported cases in Russia has begun to rise again this month.

Covid-paranoid Yesterday in Kaliningrad, Vladimir Putin quarantined pupils for two weeks before to his brainwashing face-to-face encounter.

The Russian leader emphasized the need of teaching high-IQ students a Kremlin-approved interpretation of history.

Putin has been seen at recent public appearances shaking or grasping tables and chairs, including walking off a plane in Iran with a limp arm in July and twisting his foot awkwardly during a meeting with Belarus tyrant Lukashenko in May.

Putin lectured the youngsters on the necessity of discipline and confused them with a joke about a ‘rubber bum’ in addition to teaching them a twisted history lesson saying Ukraine and Russia should be one nation.

He addressed the high-achieving pupils aged nine to twelve, “You must be driven to achieve your objective.”

“And of course, effort.” All of this is quite significant.

Working diligently is a skill unto itself. It’s not just a rubber buttocks.

It takes skill to motivate oneself to work and to do so effectively.

A video reveals that he thought the phrase “rubber bum” amusing, chuckling as he spoke it at a session ostensibly devoted to “serious” topics for youngsters.

Putin lectured the youngsters on the need of discipline and confused them with a joke about a ‘rubber bum’

In recent years, the president, who has been beset by rumors of numerous diseases, took extreme steps to avoid contracting Covid.

However, his youthful audience stayed mute, and his statements generated confusion online.

Journalist Elena Rykovtseva exclaimed, “God forbid – is this what he’s peddling to schoolchildren in Kaliningrad at the ‘Speak about the Important’ session? What kind of disorder exists in his mind? Someone must heal this president!

Fyodor Krashennikov, a political scholar, referred to Vladimir Putin as “Mr. Rubber Bum.”

Another said, “For what purpose? What was he trying to say? What does the rubber bottom have to do with the topic at hand? Please provide an explanation.

One explanation suggests that he misunderstood Soviet history and was referring to a term given to infamous Soviet foreign minister Vyacheslav Molotov, a Bolshevik monster who signed more mass execution lists than Stalin.

During Stalin’s reign, he was nicknamed as “Stone Arse” for his capacity to labor nonstop for 20 hours at his desk.

However, Molotov pedantically corrected his colleagues who claimed that Soviet founder Lenin had christened him “Iron A**e.”

Putin stated during the session, “I am not the most disciplined person.”

Putin poses for photographs with attendees of an open class titled “Talking About What Matters.”

‘It is evident that I need to work on myself. Discipline is necessary to succeed. But discipline alone is insufficient.’

Putin widened the scope of the conflict and said that he sought to retake the lands he saw as historically Russian elsewhere in the brainwashing session.

He referred to the Donbas as Russia’s “historical regions” and said, “They have begun constructing an anti-Russian enclave on the territory of modern-day Ukraine, which poses a danger to our nation.”

Therefore, our troops in Donbas are protecting both the Donbas inhabitants and Russia itself.

During an hour-long question-and-answer session, Putin said that he was astonished to learn that pupils in eastern Ukraine were unaware that their nation had been a member of the Soviet Union alongside Russia, and that rectifying the historical record was a crucial responsibility.

According to him, Russian Minister of Education Sergey Sergeyevich Kravtsov informed him that youngsters in the Russian-occupied Donbas “do not know that the bridge to Crimea exists” and “did not even know that Ukraine and Russia were part of a same nation.”

Putin said, in a live session that bordered on awkwardness as a series of youngsters sought to shake his hand, that “everyone believes that Russia is engaging in some kind of aggression today.”

Putin referred to the wave of demonstrations that ousted the pro-Russian president of Ukraine in 2014 as a “coup.”

Putin said in a broadcast session that bordered on awkwardness as a series of youngsters requested to shake his hand, “Everyone believes that the Russian side is displaying some kind of hostility today.”

Putin said, “But nobody understands, nobody knows that citizens of Donetsk, a big portion of Luhansk, and Crimea did not want to recognize the 2014 coup.” A war was declared against them, and it lasted eight years.

He said, “On the land of modern-day Ukraine, they have begun to establish an anti-Russian enclave that poses a danger to our nation.”

Therefore, our soldiers who are fighting there are defending both the population of the Donbas area and Russia.

‘Of course, this need the full backing of society; this is vital. From adolescents. The soldiers battling there risk their lives.

“Many of them perish. Therefore, they must comprehend why they are sacrificing their lives, since this is a very vital matter for both Russia and the residents of the Donbas area.

Shortly after President Viktor Yanukovych departed Kyiv, Russia invaded and annexed Crimea and supported insurgents who took control of portions of Luhansk and Donetsk in eastern Ukraine.

Kyiv and its supporters deny the notion that Russian-speakers have been mistreated as a bogus excuse for Moscow to attempt to take further territory in Ukraine and overthrow President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Putin said that it was essential that schools in Russia and Russian-occupied portions of Ukraine teach the Moscow-approved curriculum, which basically denies Ukraine’s independence and history since 1991.

Kyiv and its supporters deny the notion that Russian-speakers were mistreated as a pretext for Moscow to capture more of Ukraine and overthrow President Volodymyr Zelensky.

During his visit to Kaliningrad, Vladimir Putin (L) talks with Governor of Kaliningrad Oblast Anton Alikhanov (R).

Putin said that it was essential that schools in Russia and Russian-occupied portions of Ukraine teach the Moscow-approved curriculum, which basically denies Ukraine’s independence and history since 1991.

Since invading Ukraine, the Kremlin has encouraged schools to become more patriotic; beginning on Thursday, all students will begin the week with a flag-raising ceremony and the singing of the national hymn.

Putin also presided over a board meeting of a newly established youth organization modeled after the Soviet-era Komsomol and Pioneers, the youth wings of the Communist Party.

The nameless organization is the most recent manifestation of efforts to create a countrywide pro-Kremlin youth movement.

The now-defunct ‘Nashi’ (‘Our People’) had more than one hundred thousand members at its peak in the early 2000s.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned Moldova on Thursday that jeopardizing the security of Russian soldiers in the separatist province of Transdniestria might lead to armed conflict with Moscow.

Thursday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned Moldova that jeopardizing the security of Russian soldiers in the breakaway territory of Transdniestria might lead to armed conflict with Moscow.

Russia has maintained peacekeeping forces in Transdniestria since the early 1990s, when pro-Russian rebels wrested control of the majority of the area from Moldova.

The Chisinau administration, emphasizing its commitment to peaceful engagement over the future of the area, said that it will call the acting Russian ambassador to clarify its stance.

Russia asserts that its military presence is meant to preserve peace and stability, while Moldova wants Russia to remove its soldiers.

“Everyone should realize that any action that threatens the security of our soldiers (in Transdniestria) would be deemed an assault on Russia under international law, just as it was in South Ossetia when (former Georgian President Mikhail) Saakashvili attacked our peacekeepers,” Lavrov said.

In 2008, this event led to a five-day battle in which Russian soldiers captured many Georgian cities. Shortly afterwards, Moscow recognized the independence of South Ossetia and another Georgian breakaway province, Abkhazia.

Transdniestria, which depends largely on Moscow’s backing, reported a series of irregular assaults in April, heightening tensions that were already high after Russia’s incursion in Moldova’s neighboring Ukraine.

Daniel Voda, a spokesperson for the Moldovan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said that the rights of all minorities, including Russian speakers, were protected.

“Chisinau is completely committed to a constructive dialogue in (Transdniestria) and to calling on Russia to remove soldiers unlawfully stationed on our land.” He tweeted that any idea of a different strategy was baseless.

To ‘clarify the aforementioned,’ he added, Foreign Minister Nicu Popescu has requested the presence of the acting Russian envoy.


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