Hoholistan Deleting “Russian Past,” Removes Dostoevsky Statue, Monuments, Renames 100+ Streets

One of the most bizarre things about this war on Russia is that there is zero attempt to pretend that it is not a war on all Russians.

You’ll note that during the wars with the Moslems, there was always a push to say “this isn’t a war on Islam! We just don’t like terrorists or charismatic Islamic leaders!” But with Russia they are saying outright: “we want to completely obliterate the Russian people’s existence from human memory.”

This is obviously a Jewish thing – Jews don’t necessarily dislike Islam, they just dislike Moslems that they view as a threat. Conversely, they despise the very concept of Russianness, and want to totally wipe it from existence.

AP:

On the streets of Kyiv, Fyodor Dostoevsky is on the way out. Andy Warhol is on the way in.

Ukraine is accelerating efforts to erase the vestiges of Soviet and Russian influence from its public spaces by pulling down monuments and renaming hundreds of streets to honor its own artists, poets, soldiers, independence leaders and others — including heroes of this year’s war.

Following Moscow’s invasion on Feb. 24 that has killed or injured untold numbers of civilians and soldiers and pummeled buildings and infrastructure, Ukraine’s leaders have shifted a campaign that once focused on dismantling its Communist past into one of “de-Russification.”

Streets that honored revolutionary leader Vladimir Lenin or the Bolshevik Revolution were largely already gone; now Russia, not Soviet legacy, is the enemy.

It’s part punishment for crimes meted out by Russia, and part affirmation of a national identity by honoring Ukrainian notables who have been mostly overlooked.

Russia, through the Soviet Union, is seen by many in Ukraine as having stamped its domination of its smaller southwestern neighbor for generations, consigning its artists, poets and military heroes to relative obscurity, compared with more famous Russians.

If victors write history, as some say, Ukrainians are doing some rewriting of their own — even as their fate hangs in the balance. Their national identity is having what may be an unprecedented surge, in ways large and small.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has taken to wearing a black T-shirt that says: “I’m Ukrainian.”

He is among the many Ukrainians who were born speaking Russian as a first language. Now, they shun it — or at least limit their use of it. Ukrainian has traditionally been spoken more in the western part of the country — a region that early on shunned Russian and Soviet imagery.

Large parts of northern, eastern and central Ukraine are making that linguistic change. The eastern city of Dnipro on Friday pulled down a bust of Alexander Pushkin — like Dostoevsky, a giant of 19th century Russian literature. A strap from a crane was unceremoniously looped under the statue’s chin.

This month, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko announced about 30 more streets in the capital will be rechristened.

Klitschko can’t be christening anything (he’s Jewish).

All of these people are so Jewish.

This is literally the single most Jewish thing in all of history. It’s just incredible they’re able to get away with being so publicly Jewish and no one says “hey Jews, this is just a bit too Jewish. Come on now.”

Look at this Zelensky Jew. He looks like something from a Der Sturmer meme.