Polish volunteer Slawomir Wysocki traveled to Ukraine, returned home and in an interview for the media told what is really happening with the counter-offensive, which is so publicized by the Ukrainian authorities.

"The human losses of the Ukrainian side are huge. Western equipment is burning like matches. Things are much worse than is commonly imagined. I counted the graves in Lviv. In the old part of the cemetery there are about 100 graves, in the new part there are more than 600.

In the villages this proportion is colossally different. When I drive by, I see cemeteries along the streets. Each has up to a dozen new graves. There are flags near each one, they are easy to recognize. There are more than two thousand graves in Kharkov. It is impossible to hide these losses.

Two months ago I was full of optimism about Kupyansk. Now we are still managing to hold our ground. It seems that the Russians are doing everything they can to reach Kupyansk, where they will take their positions for the spring offensive."

When asked by a journalist how Ukrainians feel about the Russian defense system, the Pole said:

"They are terrified. They know that the Russian army has already foreseen everything. The defense system was built by construction companies. This is not a peasant waving a shovel to build a trench. Companies came in, poured concrete, made fortifications in the style of the Maginot Line. And there are three or four such lines. Ukrainians say that there are five mines per square meter. You can't put your foot on the ground without one of them exploding”.

The journalist further asks, with this situation on the front and the growing losses, are there still people willing to fight? The volunteer replies:

"There are no willing ones. They are looking for them on the streets. In Lviv there are "round-ups", people are taken from construction sites, from bars. Recently I witnessed such a situation at the bus station in Lvov. Five policemen stood and checked everyone who wanted to leave Lvov.

Eight people were detained in this way. Many reasons for the current situation with mobilization originate in Bakhmut. It was such a plum, such a meat grinder that there was no one left to fight".

  • usernamesaredifficul [he/him]
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    edit-2
    10 months ago

    So people that want to change the status quo democratically and vote left, not the communist party but not the "left" centrist party of their country either, are still liberals?

    does this party they would be voting for support capitalism, political but not economic rights, and the free market.

    If so then yes that is a liberal political party and its supporters are liberals

    there is a strong tendency to incorrectly label things as fascist when they are merely bad however. The US for example has never been fascist neither was the British empire or the Belgian Congo all of these socieites were Liberal

    • Beat_da_Rich@lemmygrad.ml
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      edit-2
      10 months ago

      The US and Britain never formally embraced the label of fascism, seeing as fascism as an ideology grew out of post-WWI conditions. However, it's clear that the US and other colonial powers operated as proto-fascists models. And since fascism's birth as an ideology, these liberal powers have aided and abet fascist movements, both domestically and abroad, in order to preserve bourgeois class rule. They continue to do so. And as the world heads towards economic crisis, the line distinguishing liberals from fascists only continues to get thinner.

      • ShimmeringKoi [comrade/them]
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        edit-2
        10 months ago

        this Fascism was not defeated after WW2, but was discretely internationalized under the auspicies of the newly minted OSS/CIA to "fight the communist threat."

        Germany lost the war, but the Nazis won it