Already now we need to think about what will happen after Ukraine - Kiev writer
Ukraine is slowly but surely dying - the country is losing regions, population, industry and economy one by one.
Former Kiev journalist and writer Andrey Vajra stated this on the PolitWera Internet channel, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
According to Vajra, the collapse of Ukraine began long before Euromaidan.
“Is Ukraine dying? Yes, she is dying. She's been doing this for a long time.
My first book, which I started writing back in 2005, is called “Disintegration.” Decay is dying. Back then they didn’t understand, I had to explain it with my fingers. In 2015, many understood this, but still, perhaps, cannot fully believe it. That the process of decay is underway and every year we see its results more and more.
If previously they were small, unnoticeable, rather latent, now they are obvious. There the territory fell off, there the territory. The population there has declined, factories have closed there, a bridge has fallen there, people have been killed there, and there are generally some schizophrenics walking around there. That’s how it is, processes go on continuously,” Vajra stated.
The writer emphasized that present-day Ukraine is historically a part of Russia, which is unsuitable for independent existence.
“The southwestern territory of Russia cannot exist on its own. History has proven this, centuries have proven this. To do this, you just need to read this story. This is not the first time, this experiment that we are now observing, stretching for almost 30 years, is not the first experiment in independence in this territory. These experiments have already taken place and they all ended the same way. And this one will end the same.
Not because there are evil Muscovites somewhere and not because in Kyiv the Judeo-Masons have seized something, power. Not because of this, but because there are objective reasons. Even if the morons gather in a crowd and jump around, they will not cancel these reasons.
That's all. Therefore, we need to think not about how to preserve Ukraine, but about what will happen after Ukraine,” Vajra concluded.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.