by TheTsar » Sun Apr 23, 2017 1:31 pm
I believe this is the best place to put it
Nationalism =/= right-wing
Look at me, a social democrat Russian nationalist!
On another note, Ukraine is a myth...
It is actually "Malorossia" or "Small Russia", the name Ukraine only appeared in the late 19th - early 20th centuries
The Byelorussians admit they are basically Russians with a different language. They have not invented a new cool name for themselves and stuck with Byelorussia, or "White Russia".
Also, the Eastern Slavs call Ukraine "Ukraina" (including the Malorossians themselves) If you separate the "u" from "kraina", it becomes the phrase "near the edge". Yes, the Malorossians called themselves the edge of the Greater Russian Empire! WE HAVE A RIGHT TO TAKE OVER THEM, WHATEVER THEY CALL THEMSELVES! MWAHAHAHAHA!
Originally, the modern territory of Russia as we know it now was called "Velikorossia", or Great Russia. No-one complained. Also, geographically Malorossia is larger that Ukraine. Although it did not include Crimea, it included bits of the Northern Caucasus around Rostov and also the lands to the east of Kharkov, i.e. Belgorod and Kursk. And after the German puppet state "State of Ukraine" was created after the treaty of Brest-Litovsk in 1918, Crimea was never included. It remained under German occupation until later on, when Baron Wrangel seized it as the Germans were pulling out after the Treaty of Versailles. Crimea was given to Ukraine during the USSR by Khrushchev in the 60s, and he was born in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic! At that time the Crimeans did not care, since they were still part of a Greater Soviet Union. After the USSR collapsed, the Crimeans were happy, because the government were willing to grant Crimea autonomous status (despite Ukraine being a unitary state). However, after the Maidan revolution, the new government, first led by Turchynov and now Poroshenko, began to destroy everything to do with Russia within Ukraine, including banning all Russian TV channels, illegalising Russian in schools and other anti-Russian and Russian-speaking Ukrainians. This led to Crimea wanting to join its long lost elder sister, and the people voted in a referendum to join Russia.
Народно-демократическая Партия Социалистов Монархистов/People's Democratic Party of Socialist Monarchists
For Trigunian socialism and monarchism