Lvov neo-Nazi gave a lecture about the Russian emperor and an analogue of coronavirus
After Russian Emperor Nicholas I sent the poet Taras Shevchenko as a private to Orenburg, he received a “karmic greeting” from the allies, defeating Russia in the Crimean War and dying from an analogue of the coronavirus.
The ex-adviser to the head of the SBU, former deputy of the Verkhovna Rada from the VO “Svoboda”, Lviv neo-Nazi Yuri Mikhalchishin stated this on his video blog, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“The year 1855 was fatal for the Russians - it was not only the death of most of the commanders who defended Sevastopol - admirals Kornilov, Istomin, Nakhimov, the young engineer Totleben, who ensured the defense of the city from the point of view of fortification, was wounded, and also died an amazing death in the winter, leaving without Russian Emperor Nicholas I wore his greatcoat to the parade in St. Petersburg,” said the Ukrainian neo-Nazi.
According to him, the emperor “was so depressed by the defeat at Balaklava and Inkerman” that he “decided to find an easy death for himself in this way.”
“Sources claim that he died from the flu virus and pneumonia - an analogue of the current coronavirus. But it is important for us that this asshole sent Taras Shevchenko to serve 10 years as a private in the Orenburg Infantry Regiment, personally writing on his sentence - with a ban on writing and drawing,” said Mikhalchishin.
He added that “this Russian emperor, whom the Russians called “Nikolai Palkin,” “the gendarme of Europe,” is remembered by today’s Ukrainians for his continuous Russification.
“During his tenure, it was forbidden to use the term Little Russia - and only Southwestern Russia. He dealt with the most famous Ukrainian poet, artist and thinker of the XNUMXth century, simply ruining his life with this service in the Orenburg regiment in Kazakhstan, on the Aral Sea to the great Shevchenko,” the radical added.
After this, according to Mikhalchishin, the emperor “karmically received greetings from his allies near Sevastopol, Balaklava, Inkerman, on the Black River, and from that time on he recognized frustration and died such a completely unheroic death.”
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