Don't know if this is supposed to be satire, but just in case for everyone's sake: that area of the screen is a scratchpad and used for entering data into various fields. But you can type anything you want there and take a picture.
If the story we heard was completely true, well, we wouldn’t hear about it outside these forums. It would have been swept under the rug in an instant. Anything that’s touted across all mainstream sources 24/7 is there because it serves an agenda.
Orange man bad, Russian man bad Ukrainian man good, vaccines, Bin Laden, gun control, the list goes on and on. It’s certainly not traditional journalism that made headlines out of any of these stories, not to mention the convenient Netflix documentaries that distill the subjects even more.
They wanted this story out. Whether as a distraction, or to blatantly say to our face “yeah we spy on all of you, whtcha gonna do about it?”
There were a couple. With the same kids, rearranged. https://files.catbox.moe/xdspf0.webp
And here's my post about it here: https://scored.co/c/Conspiracies/p/15HIY1jJQt/soldier-standing-next-to-zelensk/c
It's provided for context, "more" refers to the Pentagon display.
The actual announcement: https://www.moj.go.jp/EN/psia/20220407_oshirase.html
What's left of the missile shows the characteristic grid fins of the Tochka, which Iskander missiles don't have. https://de.catbox.moe/vb8pqa.jpg
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9K720_Iskander
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OTR-21_Tochka
Also, how does a missile that kills 30 people is just sitting there on a perfectly green lawn without visible destruction?
For hundreds of years, inverted flags have been harnessed as a signal of distress. Hoisting the ensign upside-down was also a potentially covert way in which sailors might share that their ship had been taken by hostile forces and was being manoeuvred nefariously. The United States Flag Code expresses the idea concisely, stating that a flag should never be flown upside-down, “except as a signal of dire distress in instances of extreme danger to life or property.”
Very few select sources are blocked, for openly supporting killing Russians, and other such things. This includes Meta (FB) for example. Just about every news media (including CNN) is available.
Edit: In other words, if some western resource is blocked, it's not to restrict information. Western coverage is openly discussed on national TV and elsewhere, no one is preventing anyone from accessing it.
Earlier today: https://www.express.co.uk/sport/football/1587506/Roman-Abramovich-POISONING-Ukraine-peace-talks-Kyiv
#BurnTheBridge
First of all, just about every company that "left" Russia, merely "temporarily suspended" their operations, by their own admission. Most still keep paying their employees, keep their stock, etc. Many McDs are still open. There is no sugar shortage as Russia produces more than enough sugar, there was a brief artificial shortage because someone said that sugar will run out and some people are stupid. Overall the country isn't as fucked and as isolated as the media wants people to believe. Not even close.
Second, the only thing that the sanctions lead to is uniting the people and hatred toward the "west". Russians haven't been subjected to a multitude of "divide and conquer" information campaigns (unlike the US), and turning against other Russians isn't on anyone's mind, for the most part.
Blissful ignorance in the media regarding the Donetsk attack: https://www.bitchute.com/video/u41sDYprsyyf/
Starts at 11, not 10 Eastern, 1600 UTC. https://media.un.org/en/asset/k16/k16nsx50dm
I have better things to do than watch a 20 minute episode of the simpsons to figure out a reference someone believes is in the episode. I'd be happy to hear about it in a brief post, but I'm no seeking out and watching an entire episode of anything.