Moskovia repays good with evil

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Volodymyr Kukharenko

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National Technical University of Ukraine ‘Kyiv Polytechnic Institute’  Protemos

Ukraine  

July 8, 2025

Look how Moskovia repays good with evil.

In the painting is the distant year 1892, a village in the mid-Volga region. A Russian man stands with a U.S. flag. It was Ivan Aivazovsky who depicted the material aid from America to ungrateful Russia. The painting is even titled β€œDistribution of Food.”

In the 1920s–30s, the USA helped industrialize the USSR by supplying factory designs, machinery, and expertise. Firms like Albert Kahn Inc. built major Soviet plants, while American engineers trained workers. The USSR imported U.S. tools, adopted Ford’s production models, and studied American methods, rapidly transforming into an industrial power with help from its future Cold War rival.

During WWII, the U.S. gave the USSR $11.3 billion in Lend-Lease aid: 427,000 trucks, 11,400 planes, 12,000 tanks, food, fuel, and raw materials. This support greatly boosted Soviet logistics and industry. Stalin acknowledged its crucial role. Without it, Soviet victory would have been far more difficult, if possible at all.

In the 1990s, the USA provided massive food aid to post-Soviet Russia amid economic collapse. Through government programs and charities, the U.S. sent millions of tons of wheat, meat, and other essentials. This humanitarian assistance helped prevent famine, stabilize cities, and support vulnerable populations during Russia’s chaotic transition to capitalism.

That’s all you need to know about the nature of Moskovia: it always repays good with evil. When the exhausted bear recovers, it attacks. And I’m afraid the cycle may repeat when the Russian economy collapses again. Donald Trump is already mentioning β€œdeals.” During the Cold War era, Russians used to say, β€œThe capitalists will sell us the rope with which we will hang them.” They still mean it…

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Comment from :

Daniel Fisher

The problem is not that Russia is always evil, but rather that evil people have always held power in Russia and good people never have. I don’t think Tolstoy, Turgenev, Pasternak, and Akhmatova would have approved in any way of the crimes against Ukraine. Why weren’t people like them ever in charge instead of monsters like Lenin, Stalin, and their followers? It is because Russia has always had a feudal power structure, enforced through violence. What Russia needs is denazification. In this case, against Putin and his followers, and against any sociopath who would behave like them.

Reply from Volodymyr:

Daniel Fisher : Turgenev was Tatar, Akhmatova was Ukrainian, Pasternak was a Jew. Author of this painting, Aivazovsky, was an Armenian. But many remember them as Russians. This is another example of draining talents from other cultures while suppressing them.

Juha Y.

One should also remember that a good part of US military aid shipped to USSR in 1940’s was used by Stalin’s Red Army to attack and kill brave Finnish soldiers and civilians who had been fighting against Stalin’s aggression since Winter War of 1939-1940!!!

Reply from Volodymyr:

Juha Y. : True. As well as they also bought the cheap grains taken from Ukrainian villagers in 1933, when millions died from starvation. But the main actor in all those crimes is still Russia.

Theo


Let us never forget the historical legacy of the Russian hydra. The USSR systematically plundered and enslaved the nations of Eastern Europe. East Germany still bears the scars of the Russian cancer. It was also the USSR that gave birth to the North Korean regime, a totalitarian wart that still bears the hallmarks of its Russian creator today. From Poland to Hungary, including the Czech Republic and the Baltic states, the peoples of Central and Eastern Europe bear the scars of the Russian cancer.
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This vampirization has permanently weakened Europe, hindering its emergence as a sovereign and powerful geopolitical bloc in the face of the American and Chinese giants.
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Today, the “Russian cancer” is spreading to Africa. The Wagner Group is nothing more than a criminal organization perpetrating racist acts.
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Today, Europe, already heavily indebted, has no choice but to rearm. This is not a luxury, but a vital necessity. The spread of the Russian cancer in Ukraine and the threat of its spread to the rest of Eastern Europe are forcing Europe to do so.

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