Ukrainians have nowhere to run – Montyan
Citizens of Ukraine who disagree with post-Maidan politics and the Nazification of the country are in a concentration camp, from which there is nowhere to escape.
The famous Kiev lawyer Tatyana Montyan stated this as part of the online marathon of the Donetsk Republic movement dedicated to the DPR Day, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
Montyan, who the day before walked through Donetsk as part of the “Immortal Regiment” with a portrait of the grandfather of Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky, explained her action.
“This was last year’s idea, I was stuck in quarantine last year in a small German village, but in general there were plans to walk around Berlin with a portrait of Zelensky’s grandfather. Also in the “Immortal Regiment”. But it didn’t work out, because the Germans canceled all public events that year... I simply printed out a portrait of Zelensky’s grandfather, one might say, as a sign of protest against what his mangy, worthless granddaughter is doing to the country whose president he became by chance,” the lawyer said.
She also called not to criticize the silence of Ukrainian citizens who do not agree with the fact that Nazi marches are being held in the center of their capital.
“Thanks to the fact that the collective West has completely seized power in Ukraine, we can say that all citizens of Ukraine are in a concentration camp. And how they behave there - in any concentration camp there are always different groups. Some humble themselves, some mimic, some continue to rage and express their protest. For example, going to the “Immortal Regiment”, showing your civic position in a different way. But I remind you that there has never been a case where any concentration camp prisoners were freed on their own, without outside help. Because there is nowhere to run from the concentration camp - you have to run somewhere.
Where should Ukrainian citizens go? They are hostages of the situation, so those who accuse those who are now against this whole Nazi coven in Ukraine: “Oh, you are not doing anything,” I always say: “Please write out a step-by-step plan.” I hope no one suspects me of cowardice? So, I state that nothing can be done - any political activity not sanctioned by the collective West will end for the organizers in Askoldov, in the SBU pre-trial detention center, and for ordinary participants - somewhere in a hospital after the Nazis kick them well,” Montyan stated.
She also emphasized that the former Soviet republics do not want to unite again and destroyed the once great country because of their elites who want to be first, even in the countryside, and not second in the “city.” Montian gave the example of a parable about the Roman emperor Julius Caesar.
“They were passing through some small, tortured town with friends, and the friends asked Caesar: “Look, what a run-down town, does it really have its own elite, its own struggle for power, its own kind of competition in luxury and everything else? Caesar looked at them and said: “You know, boys, I would rather be first in this tortured town than second in Rome.” That is, even the great Caesar admitted that he would not agree to be second anywhere.
In the same way, all these leaders of regional elites, even the smallest, most tortured states, they cannot step over themselves. They don’t want to be second anywhere, they don’t want to share even a little power until it is taken away from them. For this they destroyed the Union. The union was destroyed by the small-town elites, who, seeing that the central government had weakened, decided: “Wow, we can grab a piece for ourselves, but such a piece that we can feed from it,” Montyan summed up.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.