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Sanctions Impact in Russia


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2022 Mar 4, 11:05pm   53,760 views  411 comments

by AmericanKulak   ➕follow (9)   💰tip   ignore  

Pay $1.81/gallon for gas
https://www.globalpetrolprices.com/Russia/gasoline_prices/?source=patrick.net

Gas in Russia is cheaper than Gas in Qatar or Bahrain or Saudi Arabia.

Unable to buy $30/lb luxury Italian Cheese, $30/bottle midrange French Wines, expensive German Audio Equipment... what will the Russians do with themselves?

Eat local cheese, drink local beer, and buy the same audio equipment from China that's on Amazon USA

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55   Misc   2022 Mar 11, 2:13pm  

GDP is a crap measure of the economy.

Example: Government spending adds to GDP.

Right now Russia has slightly less than 1 million people in the military. In WWII the Russian army totaled about 11 million. I would like this current conflict confined to the Ukraine. If Russia decides to boost its GDP by going to full wartime production, it would alleviate the hit to GDP, but would scare the ever living shit out of the West.
56   socal2   2022 Mar 11, 3:02pm  

Patrick says
I agree. The world needs to be multi-polar, and it currently is not. It's GloboCap all the way down.


I dunno - the world was much more violent when it was multi-polar. Violence is ticking up now (Ukraine) as America is perceived as being weak with Slow Joe Biden at the helm.

Everyone posting on this forum has enjoyed unprecedented peace and prosperity in our lives thanks to Pax-Americana. We are truly one of the luckiest generations in recorded history in terms of not having to suffer from militarized violence like all of our ancestors.






57   AmericanKulak   2022 Mar 11, 3:28pm  

socal2 says

Everyone posting on this forum has enjoyed unprecedented peace and prosperity in our lives thanks to Pax-Americana. We are truly one of the luckiest generations in recorded history in terms of not having to suffer from militarized violence like all of our ancestors.


And Debt, Outsourcing including the utter hollowing out of huge swaths of US Cities - esp. smaller cities like Scranton, Cinncinati, Binghampton, etc., and CRT/BLM bullshit. In 1990 it was unthinkable to have women in combat arms, and if you said Crossdressing perverts would be openly wearing makeup and sporting padded bras in the US Army in 30 years, would have laughed you out the room. Much less Drag Queens in Public Libraries with Kindergarten Kids.

$30T in debt, 120% of GDP, and that's just Federal - not including State or Private debt. Without a damn thing to show for it.
58   socal2   2022 Mar 11, 3:55pm  

AmericanKulak says
And Debt, Outsourcing including the utter hollowing out of huge swaths of US Cities - esp. smaller cities like Scranton, Cinncinati, Binghampton, etc., and CRT/BLM bullshit. In 1990 it was unthinkable to have women in combat arms, and if you said Crossdressing perverts would be openly wearing makeup and sporting padded bras in the US Army in 30 years, would have laughed you out the room. Much less Drag Queens in Public Libraries with Kindergarten Kids.

$30T in debt, 120% of GDP, and that's just Federal - not including State or Private debt. Without a damn thing to show for it.


How does cheering on Russia gobbling up their former Eastern European slave colonies and hoping or a Multi-polar world help this?

One can against the woke Corporate bullshit you cite above and also be against Russia invading their neighbors at the same time.
59   Misc   2022 Mar 11, 4:03pm  

Russia has no intentions of occupying the Ukraine.

It's total military is less than 1 million people. To occupy a country the size/population of Ukraine would take an occupation army of about 2 million people. Putin just ain't conscripting anyone, especially that number.

No this is just to make the Ukraine see his way on not being able to join NATO, making sure there are no more attacks from Ukrainians on the Donblass section, and formal recognition of Crimea belonging to Russia (with water rights).

If you think Putin is going to pay Russian money to rebuild what he is destroying in Ukraine, you are mistaken.

He has no intention of keeping it.
60   socal2   2022 Mar 11, 4:08pm  

Misc says
If you think Putin is going to pay Russian money to rebuild what he is destroying in Ukraine, you are mistaken.

He has no intention of keeping it


And he has made Russia a total pariah state and much poorer as a result.

Putin also showed the world the Russian military sucks and can't even manage logistics and supplies invading their next door neighbors.

So even if Putin pounds Ukrainian cities into submission with cowardly artillery and rocket strikes from afar - what has Russia really gained to offset the economic, social and political costs they will suffer over the years to come?
61   Misc   2022 Mar 11, 4:23pm  

He gains nothing except to have Europe united against him, which is why I didn't think he was going to invade in the first place.

The Russian military is getting better as time goes by. They are kinda new at this.

Putin saw what the CIA backed insurgents/terrorists did to his proxy's (Syria) cities. Maybe he is of the mind "do to me, I'll do the same to your proxies".

Still a bad move on his part, in my opinion.
62   socal2   2022 Mar 11, 4:27pm  

Misc says
The Russian military is getting better as time goes by. They are kinda new at this.


I thought the Russians got their recent experience (and overconfidence) fighting in Syria, Georgia, Crimea and Donbass?
63   Booger   2022 Mar 11, 4:36pm  

Misc says
Putin just ain't conscripting anyone,


Yeah, I'd like to see how well that would go over.
65   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2022 Mar 12, 7:42pm  

Patrick says


Hilarious. I was thinking same thing… I wish they were gone here too. Especially fucking Starbucks. Impossible to find a mom and pop coffee shop because chains ran them all out of business here.
66   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2022 Mar 12, 7:44pm  

Booger says
Misc says
Putin just ain't conscripting anyone,


Yeah, I'd like to see how well that would go over.


I got this one from you I think


67   RWSGFY   2022 Mar 14, 9:46am  

LONDON (Reuters) - The world’s top association of ship certifiers has withdrawn membership from the Russia Maritime Register of Shipping (RS) due to the impact of sanctions on Moscow after its invasion of Ukraine, in another blow to the country’s vital shipping sector.
Classification societies provide services such as checking that ships are seaworthy, and this certification cover is essential for securing insurance and entry into ports.
In recent days, Britain’s LR and Denmark’s DNV, have both announced they were stopping or winding down their business ties with Russia.
The International Association of Classification Societies (IACS), which had 12 members previously including LR and DNV and forms the top tier of ship certifiers globally, said late on Friday it was withdrawing RS’ membership with immediate effect, which it said was “no longer tenable”, citing UK sanctions on Russia where IACS is domiciled.
68   Eric Holder   2022 Mar 15, 12:27pm  

11.03.2022 - 07:13 UTC
An An-124-100 freighter belonging to Russian cargo specialist Volga-Dnepr Airlines (VI, Ulyanovsk Vostochny), carrying Covid-19 testing kits previously ordered from China by the Canadian government, has been seized at Toronto Pearson Airport amid international sanctions against Russia imposed after its invasion of Ukraine.

RA-82078 (msn 9773054559153) was detained on February 28 after the European Union and Canada - but before the United States - initiated airspace flight bans paralysing the movement of aircraft operated by Russian airlines carrying passengers or cargo.

The Antonov Design Bureau freighter, which had landed at Toronto the previous day via a refuelling stop at Anchorage Ted Stevens, is now stored there, the ch-aviation fleets advanced module shows, and it will remain there for the foreseeable future, according to Omar Alghabra, Canada’s minister of transport.

Volga-Dnepr Airlines, whose subsidiaries include AirBridgeCargo, Atran, and London Stansted-based CargoLogicAir, operates eleven An-124s, three of which are currently active, among its all-owned fleet of sixteen aircraft.

...

Distinctive for its nose-loading cargo bay, the An-124 “Ruslan” entered service in 1986 and fewer than 60 were ever made. Less than half are still in use. Antonov Design Bureau is a state-owned Ukrainian manufacturer. The Ruslan is the second-heaviest freighter in the world after the majestic An-225 “Mriya”. The world’s only An-225 was destroyed in a Russian airstrike on Gostomel airport in the first days of the invasion.


https://www.ch-aviation.com/portal/news/113445-an-124-of-russias-volga-dnepr-seized-at-toronto-canada?source=patrick.net
69   Patrick   2022 Mar 15, 12:32pm  

All these sanctions will ultimately drive the creation of alternative systems, which is already happening as Russia starts to trade with China in their own currency, and prepares to sell oil to India.

The dollar itself is being undermined by sanctions, because the dollar gets its value from the need to trade oil in dollars. When the dollar is no longer necessary to buy oil, we will have to pay many more dollars to import anything, and US inflation will continue to rise.

People used to fear the US military, but now that the military has the cancer of wokeness, why would US soldiers fight at all? Worse, the government betrayed all US soldiers by demanding that they be injected with an unapproved experimental "vaccine" which was not even tested on animals.

There is no limit to Biden's ability to fuck things up.

The long-term US mistake was allowing corrupt CEOs to outsource US manufacturing to China for short term profits to themselves, at the cost of America's long-term prosperity. We can recover, but it will take decades.
70   Eric Holder   2022 Mar 15, 12:34pm  

Patrick says
All these sanctions will ultimately drive the creation of alternative systems, which is already happening as Russia starts to trade with China in their own currency, and prepares to sell oil to India.


Good. We need to decouple from these fucks. End offshoring, end outsourcing.
71   Patrick   2022 Mar 15, 12:35pm  

Eric Holder says
End offshoring, end outsourcing.





I agree with that, but it's going to be a bumpy ride downward for quite a while.
72   Eric Holder   2022 Mar 15, 12:36pm  

Patrick says
Eric Holder says
End offshoring, end outsourcing.





I agree with that, but it's going to be a bumpy ride downward for quite a while.


I don't mind a bumpy ride to a worthy destination. Beats a smooth slide to hell all day every day.
73   AmericanKulak   2022 Mar 15, 12:40pm  

China tells Biden to Fuck Off on sanctions. After all, they have all the shit on Biden, too, if he decides to grow balls. They also know that 80% of the supply Chain, including Japanese and Taiwanese and South Korean brands, lead back to Shenzhen. It'll be YEARS before it can be replaced, and the manufacturing experts are dead or retired in the USA.
https://www.newsweek.com/america-allies-tell-china-stop-supporting-russia-war-ukraine-sanctions-1688050?source=patrick.net

Miss Lindsay suddenly grows a pair on China, now that the Petrodollar and Western Globalist Banksters are at risk:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/lindsey-graham-offers-to-help-joe-biden-punish-china-if-beijing-bails-out-putin/ar-AAV5dfF?source=patrick.net
75   RWSGFY   2022 Mar 16, 7:47pm  

A Russian-owned superyacht can't leave a dock in Norway — not because of sanctions, but because no one in the port will sell it fuel. The Ragnar is owned by Russian oligarch Vladimir Strzhalkovsky, a former KGB agent who has long been linked to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
"We find the discrimination against us, extremely unjust," the yacht's captain, Robert Lankester, wrote in a message decrying the ship's predicament. He noted that Strzhalkovsky is not currently on a European or U.K. sanctions list. And, he said, the yacht's crew is not Russian.
Lankester's public notice was highlighted by Norwegian public broadcaster NRK, which reports that the Malta-registered ship is sitting at a quay in Narvik, a port city in northern Norway.
Strzhalkovsky is the former head of mining giant Norilsk Nickel. The 68-meter (223 feet) Ragnar was custom-built on the hull of a former service ship capable of pushing its way through ice. Part of its bespoke interior evokes a cozy British pub, according to a profile in Boat International. And while its amenities include "a BigBo amphibious ATV, heli-skiing equipment, four See-Doos, four ski scooters, six Seabobs, a multipurpose island and a giant slide," it currently can't find anyone who will fill its fuel tanks.
Let them row home, a local supplier told NRK.
76   richwicks   2022 Mar 16, 8:49pm  

AmericanKulak says
China tells Biden to Fuck Off on sanctions. After all, they have all the shit on Biden, too, if he decides to grow balls.


Considering how senile the kiddie fucker was a year and 1/2 ago - I doubt he's be able to find his balls if he had one end of string tied around them, and the other end tied to his finger.

Biden isn't part of this equation. I think it's quite obvious that being a willing meat puppet of the intelligence agencies and his perk is to be above the law, as long as he sticks to the script and I do think Biden is having some difficulty sticking to the script at this point.

I would feel badly for Biden, if his history in government wasn't one of being a completely corrupt criminal piece of shit. I kind of enjoy the old twat trying to bluff his way through a public speech. He's definitely the worst president in my lifetime, and I remember Nixon. I'd say beyond him - George W. Bush or Barack Obama was the worst presidents in my lifetime - which was worse? Flip a coin, both were totally garbage.

From top down: Trump/Reagan, Nixon, Carter, Ford, George W. Bush, Clinton, George W. Bush/Obama, Biden. That's in terms of the presidents that went from helping this nation (I think Nixon, Reagan, Trump and even Carter did) to those that harmed it. We haven't had a anything but dog shit for presidents starting in 1988 with the exception of Trump. But I was a child up until 1988, maybe I'm looking through rose colored glasses of my childish stupidity.
77   Patrick   2022 Mar 16, 11:25pm  

AmericanKulak says
They also know that 80% of the supply Chain, including Japanese and Taiwanese and South Korean brands, lead back to Shenzhen. It'll be YEARS before it can be replaced, and the manufacturing experts are dead or retired in the USA.


One thing that bothers me is that the US elite who outsourced our manufacturing to China got rich off of the impoverishment of the US and will probably never be punished for it.

Medieval China had the death penalty for exporting trade secrets like silk production.
78   RWSGFY   2022 Mar 18, 7:56am  

(Reuters) -Russia’s central bank kept its key interest rate at 20% on Friday following an emergency rate hike in late February and warned of an imminent spike in inflation and a looming economic contraction.
79   komputodo   2022 Mar 18, 8:02am  

AmericanKulak says
Unable to buy $30/lb luxury Italian Cheese, $30/bottle midrange French Wines, expensive German Audio Equipment... what will the Russians do with themselves?

Get it from a chinese container ship
80   komputodo   2022 Mar 18, 8:04am  

Eric Holder says
Good. Let's hope the whole covfefe usher the long-overdue decoupling from that Commie shithole.

What the hell does S.F. have to do with all this?
81   Eric Holder   2022 Mar 21, 11:27am  

https://thehill.com/policy/international/europe/599018-lithuania-ireland-push-eu-to-step-up-sanctions-on-russian-oil?source=patrick.net


The foreign ministers of Lithuania and Ireland on Monday pushed the European Union to deepen its sanctions on Russia’s oil supply.

The EU has already placed sanctions on Russia, including freezing the assets of its central bank, but it has not yet targeted Russia’s energy sector, Reuters reported.

“Looking at the extent of the destruction in Ukraine right now, it's very hard to make the case that we shouldn't be moving in on the energy sector, particularly oil and coal,” said Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney at the beginning of EU talks in Brussels, Belgium, this week.


The EU receives 40 percent of its gas supply from Russia, but some EU nations still believe sanctions must be imposed as a consequence of Russia’s recent invasion of Ukraine, with the siege of Mariupol ratcheting up the pressure.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell called the strikes on the Ukrainian city “a massive war crime,” clarifying the bloc’s opposition to aggressive moves by Russia.

Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis said it was “unavoidable” that the EU discusses targeting Russia’s energy sector.

Kremlin: Russian oil embargo would squeeze Europe, not US
US-Saudi tensions complicate push for more oil
“And we can definitely talk about oil because it is the biggest revenue to Russia's budget,” Landsbergis added.

Countries such as Germany and Italy, which are more dependent on Russian gas than Baltic states like Lithuania, are taking a more cautious approach to sanctions on Russia’s energy sector, especially as Russian leadership has threatened to close a gas pipeline to Europe in response to these controversial moves.

Western countries including the U.S. and U.K. have already sanctioned Russian oil.
82   Eric Holder   2022 Mar 21, 11:28am  

komputodo says
Eric Holder says
Good. Let's hope the whole covfefe usher the long-overdue decoupling from that Commie shithole.

What the hell does S.F. have to do with all this?


The Russian consulate is gone but China's is still in SF.
83   FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut   2022 Mar 21, 12:51pm  

I got an interesting lesson from Russia here. They were prepared for sanctions, they sanction proofed their economy (I read about that in many publications) so these things aren't going to blindside them. A lesson for all of us here is build a parallel economy so big tech and big whatever faggots can't cancel you or do anything to you. If you don't need them and have alternatives, they have no power. McDonalds cancelled Russia, Russia was prepared, they just reopened them as some Russian brand and flipped logo to the side too to rub it in.

You need to accept payments? Dan Bongino offers payment processing that's not attached to big tech.

Parallel Economy is the way forward.
84   Eric Holder   2022 Mar 21, 12:54pm  

FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut says
I got an interesting lesson from Russia here. They were prepared for sanctions, they sanction proofed their economy


Have they really? How do you know?
85   FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut   2022 Mar 21, 2:56pm  

Eric Holder says
FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut says
I got an interesting lesson from Russia here. They were prepared for sanctions, they sanction proofed their economy


Have they really? How do you know?


I read it on the news, that any impact isn't going to affect them much, as they prepared and were expecting it. Basically, they aren't stupid.
86   RWSGFY   2022 Mar 21, 3:22pm  

FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut says
Eric Holder says
FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut says
I got an interesting lesson from Russia here. They were prepared for sanctions, they sanction proofed their economy


Have they really? How do you know?


I read it on the news, that any impact isn't going to affect them much, as they prepared and were expecting it. Basically, they aren't stupid.


Words are just that, words. In reality, even their fucking personal yahts are being arrested abroad, not to mention hundreds of billions in foreign reserves. Doesn't look not stupid at all. They obviously miscalculated.
87   RWSGFY   2022 Mar 21, 3:22pm  

GIBRALTAR (Reuters) - A luxurious super-yacht linked to the owner of Russia’s largest steel pipe maker, who is currently under British and European Union sanctions, docked in Gibraltar on Monday and was then detained by the authorities.
Western sanctions on Russian oligarchs over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine have triggered an exodus of luxury yachts from Europe in recent weeks, with several heading towards the Maldives, which has no extradition treaty with the United States.
Reuters TV footage showed the “Axioma”, believed to be owned by Dmitrievich Pumpyansky, owner of steel group TMK, moored at Gibraltar, a British Overseas Territory on the southern tip of the Iberian peninsula, flying a Maltese flag.
Britain imposed sanctions on hundreds of Russian individuals and entities last week, enabling authorities to freeze their assets.
Refinitiv data show the 72-metre vessel is owned by a British Virgin Islands holding company called Pyrene investments. An article published by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists as part of the Panama Papers leaks names Pumpyansky as a beneficiary of the holding.
89   clambo   2022 Mar 21, 4:33pm  

The price of left-handed screwdrivers luckily hasn’t changed.
90   Eric Holder   2022 Mar 21, 5:54pm  

(google translate)

The Union of Consumer Rights called for a ban on household chemicals

There are no reasons for the rise in price of household chemicals in Russia. Pavel Shapkin, chairman of the National Union for the Protection of Consumer Rights, told Radio 1 about this.

“As for household chemicals, it’s generally ridiculous here, because everything is produced in Russia, no one flies Fairy from France. Therefore, when there is talk about the fact that the ruble has fallen, it has no economic justification. Therefore, this is an attempt to cash in on the panic that has gripped the population,” Shapkin said.

At the same time, he called the rise in prices for personal hygiene products a positive factor, since it only harms people.

“I don’t understand at all how we have survived to the point that we cannot do without household chemicals. Although 50 years ago this question did not bother anyone. In general, it is not clear how the Russian nation has survived for thousands of years without household chemicals. I think it's being used too much. We rub more than 4 million tons of the Russian population into our hands, face, plates and so on every year. All this adversely affects health, the skin, destroys the immune system, and affects the environment. I believe that it is generally necessary to ban household chemicals and replace them with simple folk remedies, for example, baking soda, ”the expert added.
91   AmericanKulak   2022 Mar 21, 7:18pm  

FortWayneAsNancyPelosiHaircut says
You need to accept payments? Dan Bongino offers payment processing that's not attached to big tech.


This. And use cash whenever possible.
92   AmericanKulak   2022 Mar 21, 7:23pm  

The White House confirmed Monday they expect certain parts of the world to suffer a food shortage as an effect of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

“We do anticipate that higher energy fertilizer, wheat, and corn prices could impact the price of growing and purchasing critical food supplies for countries around the world,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday.

She said food shortages were not expected to hit the United States, but rather countries in Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia.

Reports have pointed out that both Ukraine and Russia produce a significant portion of the world’s wheat, corn, and barley as well as energy and fertilizer.

Despite Psaki’s assurance that the United States would not suffer a food shortage, the cost of fertilizer, grain, and fuel could have a significant impact on food prices.

Psaki said the White House could continue to work with global organizations to “do everything we can” to “mitigate” food shortages around the world.

“There are active discussions now,” she said, describing the Biden administration’s efforts to tackle the problem.”We’re certainly mindful that even if we’re not seeing an impact at this moment that sometimes supply chain impacts can have a lagging impact.”

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2022/03/21/white-house-warns-of-global-food-shortages-after-ukraine-invasion/?source=patrick.net

Higher Food Prices are Putin's fault, because Russia is a basket case we import nothing from... or something.
93   Eric Holder   2022 Mar 22, 10:27am  

Russian Shoppers Are Literally Fighting Each Other for Sugar

In scenes reminiscent of the last days of the Soviet Union, Russians are scrambling to get their hands on basic goods.





In videos coming out of towns and cities across Russia, crowds of people are shouting, jostling and climbing over each other to grab the last bags of sugar in barren shops.

https://t.me/bazabazon/10695?source=patrick.net

Some stores have imposed 10kg rations per customer, and there have been reports of people attacking anyone they think is panic-buying. In one scuffle in the northern city of Severodvinsk, a man with five packets of sugar in his shopping basket was punched five times in the face during a confrontation with an angry shopper.

Russians who remember the turmoil of the last few years of the Soviet Union know only too well the importance of grabbing rare goods when you see them, particularly in a crisis. Sugar is usually bought in bulk by Russians who are going to preserve large amounts of fruit, or make samogon, high-proof moonshine popular in the countryside.

“It’s a madhouse,” one shopper in the southern Russian city of Volgograd told a local media outlet last week. “The shop assistants say sugar is re-stocked every now and again, but it’s immediately snapped up — people are deliberately standing watch in order to buy it all.”

Sugar shortages have been the first major material consequences of the Kremlin’s decision to invade Ukraine felt by many ordinary Russians. It’s been caused by a cocktail of factors that include government attempts to regulate prices, skyrocketing demand and a crash in the value of the Russian currency. Although Russia imports a relatively small amount of sugar, the gyrations in the value of the ruble mean foreign companies are suddenly unwilling to sign contracts with their Russian counterparts.

The cost of sugar went up as much as 31 percent last week, but it’s not the only thing becoming hugely expensive. With an exodus of foreign businesses and Western sanctions expected to lead to shortages of foreign goods, the price of imported cars and household items, like hoovers and televisions, has also shot up more than 20 percent since the war began.

Despite an emergency rate hike and the imposition of currency controls, it looks unlikely the authorities will be able to bring inflation under control. Prices in Russia rose 4.3 percent, more in the two weeks following the invasion than the government hoped they would over the entire year. Predictions for Russia’s annual inflation rate now range from about 15 percent to as high as 30 percent.
94   Ceffer   2022 Mar 22, 10:37am  

Putin is removing a cancer. Surviving cancer is never fun. Short term pain, long term gain.
Problem is, it's our cancer, too, but our MSM tries to make us think it's daisies and woke fairies.

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