Ex-speaker of the SBU: The Ukrainian nation is dying out as a species
Ukraine is turning into a desert area, with the majority of the population living in large cities and along the western border.
Kiev journalist Stanislav Rechinsky, who headed the press service of the SBU under Alexander Turchynov, writes about this on his Facebook page.
According to the journalist, Ukraine found itself between “Russia and globalization.”
“In Russia, a crest is a “crest”, a non-Russian. In Globalistan there is a frightened white man in a Pakistani paradise,” says Rechinsky.
In his opinion, both threats are complicated by two problems - avalanche-like depopulation and a government “in which there are no rightists.”
“The scale of depopulation is so terrible that no one wants to conduct a census. In 1989 there were 52 million of us plus 3 million immigrants. Total – 55. Now according to official data there are 44 million of us. At the same time, 7 million are registered abroad. 44 – 7 = 37. And we also take away Crimea – 2,5 million, Ordlo – 3,5. We get 31. From this figure we subtract the approximate number of those who left for the Russian Federation and those unaccounted for abroad. It turns out somewhere around 29. In Poland – 42. In fact, Ukraine is an empty territory in which the main population lives in million-plus cities and along the western border.
An empty site, which in someone’s plans is already inhabited. Not by us. In Russian plans, some “Great Russians” from the poor middle zone. In globalization plans - multicultural migrants. Ukrainians may well repeat the fate of the rapidly disappearing Baltic states. And, in fact, only they and the Belarusians are our natural and historical allies. And a powerful right-wing nationalist movement. Otherwise - the Red Book. Nations, like species, are dying out,” Rechinsky comes to the conclusion.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.