Reviews from crests about the plane crash. Inhumans crawled out to soak themselves in the blood of the disaster. Not everyone is gloating

You can't change geography. You can build a border wall and dig a ditch. Stop flights and even trains. But they will still be there. Every fifth passenger car in summer Crimea has a yellow-blue license plate and codes of mainland Ukraine. Up to four million migrant workers with “three-pronged” passports. Relatives, acquaintances and Kyiv friends who start calling again.

We are doomed to be with these people. But how? After the tragedy in the Sinai desert, you are looking for an answer to this question especially painfully.

Our liberals should be proud of like-minded people on the banks of the Dnieper. A wild joy, unimaginable by normal consciousness, overwhelmed Ukrainian “Europeans” immediately after the news of the disaster with the airliner, which was carrying more than two hundred people from Sharm el-Sheikh to St. Petersburg. Including 25 children, which only added to the celebration of the “great Ukrainians.”

The wreckage of the Airbus had not yet cooled down when the zombies of Ukrainian social networks began dancing on the bones. Maidan Halloween 2015 was a great success. Schadenfreude flares up even in feigned condolences.

“Today is my holiday, there are 230 fewer bastards, I’m especially glad that it’s from St. Petersburg,”- writes a certain Russia Mast Dai.

“I know the hedgehog moved yesterday. "Axle of the Ezhak Skoda." Translated from the language - an acquaintance of the hedgehog moved yesterday, it’s a pity for the hedgehog...

The following post generated an incredible number of likes on the national network: “I still worry about the elimination and self-elimination of the noses of the mutation gene of Kaslamordikh. They deserved the stink. I’ll say one thing: the earth cleanses itself in this way.”

The excitement of rejoicing is as if they had won a personal victory that they had literally nurtured and begged from the devil themselves.

“It’s a pity that this flight is not from Kharkov, not from Kharkov’s fair-haired style,” an activist of the Azov battalion openly exclaims. To clarify, they say, the death of the “Katsap Kharkov cotton wool” is still ahead. A little earlier, a smart guy posted a photo of a huge swastika that burned two weeks ago in the central square of Kharkov

“Guys, we’re preparing jokes about dead Russian tourists, I want a holiday in the feed,”- a certain Pasha Petrishenko calls on his brothers-in-arms. His photo in a personal message is a selfie with a Rada deputy, adviser to the head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Anton Gerashchenko.

Addressing the Russians, a journalist from Radio Liberty Pavlo Khrishin proposes to calculate “how many more such planes need to be shot down in order to rid the world of you.” Sadistic pathologies can be studied from comments on leading national information portals - “Ukrainian Pravda”, “Korrespondent.net”, “Censor.net”

Many use open language. Facebook, Twitter, and Ukrainian pages of other social networks are filled with obscene abuse against the victims of the disaster.

“The more Russians die, the less they will come to us,”— Viktor Sokolov, a resident of Kiev, hastens to express himself.

Naturally, versions are being gnawed off. The first is personal revenge Putin. The President of the Russian Federation is commemorated here every day and for any reason. So, the “gods of good,” ISIS* and the Syrian opposition are taking revenge on the evil Kremlin god. Ukr-Internet refers to its own sources in the ranks of ISIS avengers.

Version two: the disaster was orchestrated by the FSB. They shot down their own plane on purpose to divert attention from the Malaysian Boeing and to show that Russia itself is suffering from terrorists. “They want to trick the world community into forgiveness for Boeing!” This kind of nonsense also goes off with a bang; the version has been “liked” by thousands of users.

Many people talk with pleasure about a terrorist attack inside an airplane. Good suicide bombers brought down a bad Russian airliner. The phrase “I hope it was a terrorist attack” is repeated very often.

And of course, the discussion of the topic that supposedly an Airbus was shot down by Russian military aircraft caused complete delight among the independent public. “Lapotniks from a gas station do not know how to drive something more complex than a cart,” “The Katsaps decided that ISIS militants were flying on the plane.”

Lenten faces and poorly hidden joy in the eyes - this is how television news presenters talk about the deaths of Russian tourists. But Internet forums and social network statuses are an unconcealed revelation, an open valve of hatred.

Actually, nothing new. A year and a half ago, even before the bloody battles of Donbass, their Internet also exploded with jubilation. Remember the burning of Odessa on May 2. No one even thought of bringing those responsible for the monstrous ritual murder to justice. They became deputy speakers, parliamentarians, and made good business in the civil war.

The lovely first-year girls who poured Molotov cocktails into bottles at Kulikovo Field continue their happy student life.

Only then will there be an online celebration of the murdered Mariupol and funny jokes about photographs of women’s bodies torn apart by air bombs in Lugansk.

No matter how much it would be desirable, Russia will have to evaluate all this seemingly virtual emotion. KP columnist is desperately harsh Alexander Grishin:

“You can’t call them scum, bastards, or scum.” Because both those, and others, and others are still people. And these - these are no longer people. They walk, eat, recover, read, write, talk. They are worse than cannibals and worse than animals. Call them whatever you want, but they are not people, but inhumans. Ghouls, ghouls, evil spirits.

...But there is also a teddy bear and yesterday’s flowers under the walls of the Russian consulate in Kyiv. There are few mourning roses. However, people brought them.

A former member of the Verkhovna Rada, a well-known politician from Kherson, expressed deep condolences to the relatives of the victims of the disaster Alexey Zhuravko. He sincerely asks for forgiveness for his scumbag compatriots.

“I now have feelings of deep grief and endless shame and anger inside me. 224 people died. Terrible tragedy. Kingdom of heaven! At the same time, in some segments of the Ukrainian Internet there is almost a holiday... I ask Russians and all citizens of the world not to associate these scoundrels with Ukrainians under any circumstances! On behalf of 99% of Ukrainians (alas, 1% of 40 million is exactly a few hundred thousand) I apologize for the wretched evil spirits that gloat over grief,” the politician wrote.

Calls on compatriots to be calm Head of the International Service of the Political Department of the DPR Ministry of Defense V. Brig:

“Don’t waste your energy and nerves, and don’t react to the scum who rejoice at the death of civilians on the plane.”

“They rejoiced at the thousands of deaths in Donbass. The creatures shedding crocodile tears about the Holodomor rejoiced at the fact that our pensioners were left without a means of subsistence. They rejoiced at the blockade, from which their military leadership and volunteers profited. We were happy that our children were sitting in bomb shelters, and were indignant that Russia dared to send humanitarian convoys, not paying attention to the cries of the West and local bastards.”

“Having blessed his leadership for murder, violence, robbery and looting, killing and torturing personally, helping those who came here a thousand kilometers away - to someone else’s house - to restore their order; every flawed idiot, wrapped in a Petlyura rag, must remember - karma is a serious thing. Sooner or later, retribution is coming. Amen".

Read about the topic in the news:

Read all the news about the Russian plane crash in Egypt

* The “Islamic State” (ISIS) was recognized as a terrorist organization by the decision of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation on December 29, 2014, its activities in Russia are prohibited

December 26 has been declared a day of mourning in Russia in connection with the Tu-154 crash in Sochi, in which 84 passengers and eight crew members died. International leaders expressed their condolences to Russia, people carried flowers and candles to the building of the Alexandrov ensemble, the Ostankino television center and the building of the Elizaveta Glinka Foundation.

However, Ukrainian officials have not yet commented on the tragedy.

For example, on the website and Facebook account of Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, only congratulations on Catholic Christmas were published. Even a day after the tragedy over the Black Sea, there was not a word about the crash of a Russian plane.

Ukrainian officials commenting on the situation in neutral tones are in the minority.

“Whether it was a terrorist act or some kind of malfunction of the plane, I think it’s too early to say. In any case, the only thing I don’t like is the fact that, indeed, the Russian ambassador to Turkey recently died under circumstances known to everyone - and today the plane died. This may have certain consequences for the world community,” said SBU head Vasily Gritsak on the 112 Ukraine TV channel.

But the “balanced” statements of Ukrainian officials about the Tu-154 crash are rather an exception.

Ukrainian officials, commenting on the tragedy over the Black Sea, do not hide their gloating.

One of the most scandalous was the opinion of Yuriy Biryukov, Poroshenko’s adviser.

He apparently decided to “witty” connect the death of a Russian military aircraft and another tragedy - the fatal poisoning of dozens of people in Irkutsk. On his Facebook page, the official wrote: “The plane of the Russian Defense Ministry crashed... There was only one desire - to take a bottle of Hawthorn to the horde’s embassy.”

Ukrainian parliamentarians did not stand aside either. Non-factional people's deputy, the country's representative in PACE Borislav Bereza admitted that he “is not happy or upset” because of the crash of the Russian plane.

The official explained his position as follows: the Tu-154 passengers were “flying to entertain” the Russian military in Syria, who allegedly “destroyed the infrastructure of Donbass.”

“I am not happy about the crash of the Russian plane and the death of its passengers. But I’m not upset either. They flew to entertain and film the Russian military. It is quite possible that those who previously killed Ukrainians in Donbass tortured our citizens, destroyed infrastructure, and then transferred to Syria,” he wrote on his Facebook page.

And the mayor of Dnepr (Dnepropetrovsk) and a close associate of the oligarch Igor Kolomoisky, Boris Filatov, went even further. He rejoiced at the death of the passengers on board the Tu-154, writing on Facebook that “instead of celebrating the liberation of Aleppo,” the musicians and military “will be in hell.”

Not everyone is gloating

It is noteworthy that many subscribers of Biryukov, Bereza and Filatov completely agree with their statements - the posts of Ukrainian politicians on Facebook have collected hundreds of comments. But there are also those who express sympathy for the tragedy and accuse Ukrainian officials of inhumanity.

In the comments under the post of Poroshenko’s adviser, user Pyotr Efimov reminded the Ukrainian official:

“Doctor Lisa, who died in a plane crash, founded the first hospice at the Oncology Hospital in Kyiv in 1999. What good did Biryukov do for Ukraine?”

“It’s a disgrace,” comments Andrei Zhbanov. “Only a moral monster and a bastard can rejoice in the death of another person.” This will definitely not be welcome anywhere in the world.”

“Sane people will perceive this with compassion, in a Christian way, and will not organize a Sabbath on bones. Unfortunately, Biryukov, you lack sanity, as does Christian morality,” concludes another subscriber.

Some subscribers of Borislav Bereza, in response to his attack, doubted the mental health of the Ukrainian politician.

“Make some idiotic assumption that “probably there were people like that flying there,” and, based on your absurd conjecture, develop some kind of schizotheory about the reasons for the lack of compassion. It’s not because of the above reasons that you don’t have sympathy, you don’t have it simply because you’re not completely mentally healthy,” concluded a user under the nickname Dima Spb.

“Borislav, you can’t hate a nation,” Igor Kyiv comments on Bereza’s post. — Imagine that Europe will recognize your reaction as the official representative of Ukraine in PACE. You spoke very short-sightedly.”

Ukrainian officials were also accused of being “un-European” and of being “lost in cruelty.”

Flowers are brought to the Russian Embassy in Ukraine, lamps are lit there and notes are left. Many, including famous Kiev residents, write words of condolences to the victims of the tragedy.

“Ukrainians mourn together with Russians for those killed in a plane crash over the Black Sea. And this reaction, coming from the heart, best reflects the closeness of our peoples and demonstrates that the attempts of representatives of the “party of war” to provoke hostility and sow the seeds of discord and hatred were futile. Ukrainians and Russians were, are and will forever remain fraternal peoples. In such tragic moments this becomes obvious. I offer my condolences to the families and friends of the victims. On behalf of myself personally, from the Public Movement “Ukrainian Choice – The Right of the People”, from millions of Ukrainians who today are grieving an irreparable loss,” politician Viktor Medvedchuk wrote on Facebook.

Former Verkhovna Rada deputy Spiridon Kilinkarov also expressed words of sympathy and condolences.

“Tu-154. Tragedy, grief, irreparable loss - heaven took the talented, heaven took the best! Our condolences to the families and friends of the victims,” he wrote on his Facebook.

“A terrible tragedy near Sochi. Sincere condolences to family and friends, as well as to all Russians! Bright and eternal memory...,” adds ex-deputy Irina Berezhnaya.

Russian officials also responded to the statements of Ukrainian officials. The official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, indicated that the reason for this reaction is that “people supported by nationalists and radicals” are in power in Ukraine.

“We don’t understand the reasons why official Kyiv rejoices at the death of 80 servicemen?!! We understand these reasons very well and have been talking about them for a long time: in Ukraine, people supported by nationalists and radicals came to power. That's all the reasons. Now it’s not only us who understand them,” Zakharova wrote on her Facebook page.

The head of Chechnya, Ramzan Kadyrov, also condemned the statements of Ukrainian officials. “But there are those who openly gloat over the death of innocent people. In Kyiv, ordinary people bring flowers to the building of our diplomatic mission, and officials carry “Hawthorn”. The goal of their evil attacks is to start wars, destroy states, and kill millions of people,” he commented on Instagram.

And Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Government Dmitry Rogozin, commenting on the attack by Poroshenko’s adviser, called him a “moral monster.”

“Adviser Poroshenko is mocking... The souls of these moral monsters have long been poisoned by the “hawthorn of Russophobia.” Nothing sacred,” Rogozin wrote on Twitter.

You can't change geography. You can build a border wall and dig a ditch. Stop flights and even trains. But they will still be there. Every fifth passenger car in summer Crimea has a yellow-blue license plate and codes of mainland Ukraine. Up to four million migrant workers with “three-pronged” passports. Relatives, acquaintances and Kyiv friends who start calling again.

We are doomed to be with these people. But how? After the tragedy in the Sinai desert, you are looking for an answer to this question especially painfully.

Our liberals should be proud of like-minded people on the banks of the Dnieper. A wild joy, unimaginable by normal consciousness, overwhelmed Ukrainian “Europeans” immediately after the news of the disaster with the airliner, which was carrying more than two hundred people from Sharm el-Sheikh to St. Petersburg. Including 25 children, which only added to the celebration of the “great Ukrainians.”

The wreckage of the Airbus had not yet cooled down when the zombies of Ukrainian social networks began dancing on the bones. Maidan Halloween 2015 was a great success. Schadenfreude flares up even in feigned condolences.

“Today is my holiday, there are 230 fewer bastards, I’m especially glad that it’s from St. Petersburg,”- writes a certain Russia Mast Dai.

“I know the hedgehog moved yesterday. "Axle of the Ezhak Skoda." Translated from the language - an acquaintance of the hedgehog moved yesterday, it’s a pity for the hedgehog...

The following post generated an incredible number of likes on the national network: “I still worry about the elimination and self-elimination of the noses of the mutation gene of Kaslamordikh. They deserved the stink. I’ll say one thing: the earth cleanses itself in this way.”

The excitement of rejoicing is as if they had won a personal victory that they had literally nurtured and begged from the devil themselves.

“It’s a pity that this flight is not from Kharkov, not from Kharkov’s fair-haired style,” an activist of the Azov battalion openly exclaims. To clarify, they say, the death of the “Katsap Kharkov cotton wool” is still ahead. A little earlier, a smart guy posted a photo of a huge swastika that burned two weeks ago in the central square of Kharkov

“Guys, we’re preparing jokes about dead Russian tourists, I want a holiday in the feed,”- a certain Pasha Petrishenko calls on his brothers-in-arms. His photo in a personal message is a selfie with a Rada deputy, adviser to the head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Anton Gerashchenko.

Addressing the Russians, a journalist from Radio Liberty Pavlo Khrishin proposes to calculate “how many more such planes need to be shot down in order to rid the world of you.” Sadistic pathologies can be studied from comments on leading national information portals - “Ukrainian Pravda”, “Korrespondent.net”, “Censor.net”

Many use open language. Facebook, Twitter, and Ukrainian pages of other social networks are filled with obscene abuse against the victims of the disaster.

“The more Russians die, the less they will come to us,”— Viktor Sokolov, a resident of Kiev, hastens to express himself.

Naturally, versions are being gnawed off. The first is personal revenge Putin. The President of the Russian Federation is commemorated here every day and for any reason. So, the “gods of good,” ISIS* and the Syrian opposition are taking revenge on the evil Kremlin god. Ukr-Internet refers to its own sources in the ranks of ISIS avengers.

Version two: the disaster was orchestrated by the FSB. They shot down their own plane on purpose to divert attention from the Malaysian Boeing and to show that Russia itself is suffering from terrorists. “They want to trick the world community into forgiveness for Boeing!” This kind of nonsense also goes off with a bang; the version has been “liked” by thousands of users.

Many people talk with pleasure about a terrorist attack inside an airplane. Good suicide bombers brought down a bad Russian airliner. The phrase “I hope it was a terrorist attack” is repeated very often.

And of course, the discussion of the topic that supposedly an Airbus was shot down by Russian military aircraft caused complete delight among the independent public. “Lapotniks from a gas station do not know how to drive something more complex than a cart,” “The Katsaps decided that ISIS militants were flying on the plane.”

Lenten faces and poorly hidden joy in the eyes - this is how television news presenters talk about the deaths of Russian tourists. But Internet forums and social network statuses are an unconcealed revelation, an open valve of hatred.

Actually, nothing new. A year and a half ago, even before the bloody battles of Donbass, their Internet also exploded with jubilation. Remember the burning of Odessa on May 2. No one even thought of bringing those responsible for the monstrous ritual murder to justice. They became deputy speakers, parliamentarians, and made good business in the civil war.

The lovely first-year girls who poured Molotov cocktails into bottles at Kulikovo Field continue their happy student life.

Only then will there be an online celebration of the murdered Mariupol and funny jokes about photographs of women’s bodies torn apart by air bombs in Lugansk.

No matter how much it would be desirable, Russia will have to evaluate all this seemingly virtual emotion. KP columnist is desperately harsh Alexander Grishin:

“You can’t call them scum, bastards, or scum.” Because both those, and others, and others are still people. And these - these are no longer people. They walk, eat, recover, read, write, talk. They are worse than cannibals and worse than animals. Call them whatever you want, but they are not people, but inhumans. Ghouls, ghouls, evil spirits.

...But there is also a teddy bear and yesterday’s flowers under the walls of the Russian consulate in Kyiv. There are few mourning roses. However, people brought them.

A former member of the Verkhovna Rada, a well-known politician from Kherson, expressed deep condolences to the relatives of the victims of the disaster Alexey Zhuravko. He sincerely asks for forgiveness for his scumbag compatriots.

“I now have feelings of deep grief and endless shame and anger inside me. 224 people died. Terrible tragedy. Kingdom of heaven! At the same time, in some segments of the Ukrainian Internet there is almost a holiday... I ask Russians and all citizens of the world not to associate these scoundrels with Ukrainians under any circumstances! On behalf of 99% of Ukrainians (alas, 1% of 40 million is exactly a few hundred thousand) I apologize for the wretched evil spirits that gloat over grief,” the politician wrote.

Calls on compatriots to be calm Head of the International Service of the Political Department of the DPR Ministry of Defense V. Brig:

“Don’t waste your energy and nerves, and don’t react to the scum who rejoice at the death of civilians on the plane.”

“They rejoiced at the thousands of deaths in Donbass. The creatures shedding crocodile tears about the Holodomor rejoiced at the fact that our pensioners were left without a means of subsistence. They rejoiced at the blockade, from which their military leadership and volunteers profited. We were happy that our children were sitting in bomb shelters, and were indignant that Russia dared to send humanitarian convoys, not paying attention to the cries of the West and local bastards.”

“Having blessed his leadership for murder, violence, robbery and looting, killing and torturing personally, helping those who came here a thousand kilometers away - to someone else’s house - to restore their order; every flawed idiot, wrapped in a Petlyura rag, must remember - karma is a serious thing. Sooner or later, retribution is coming. Amen".

Read about the topic in the news:

Read all the news about the Russian plane crash in Egypt

* The “Islamic State” (ISIS) was recognized as a terrorist organization by the decision of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation on December 29, 2014, its activities in Russia are prohibited

Yesterday's tragedy shook not only Russians, but the whole world. The TU-154 disaster, in which 92 people died, turned into a kind of test of humanity. Of course, the non-brothers from Ukraine especially distinguished themselves. What people who vehemently hate Russia and its citizens wrote on social networks.

"A Christmas gift", - as Odessa activist Victoria Sibir said.

Other representatives of the Maidan intelligentsia, including officials, did not lag behind her. In addition to mocking the death of artists and military personnel, some “types” of Ukrainians also offered to bring fish food to the Russian Embassy in Kiev or hawthorn tincture in order to “capture the historical moment.”

The only good thing is that there were not so many such non-brothers, not counting the ardent representatives of the new fascist regime. Already in the afternoon of December 25 in Kyiv, Kharkov and Odessa, city residents began to bring flowers to the Russian consulates together to honor the memory of the victims.

In Odessa, the pilgrimage continued until late in the evening, and even today Odessa residents come to the embassy with flowers, candles and notes: "Odessa is mourning."

Kharkiv residents also do not lag behind their compatriots, bringing flowers to the Russian Consulate in a never-ending stream. The Book of Sorrows at the embassy is full of sincere condolences: “Kharkov mourns with you”. In addition, many of the residents of the First Capital apologize to the Russians for the behavior of their, so to speak, fellow citizens: “People live here too.”

In turn, residents of Kyiv also express condolences to the Russians: "Russia. Kyiv mourns with you."

So who are the Ukrainians? Humans or nonhumans? It seems that we cannot judge everyone for the actions of individual, so to speak, individuals. Those who rejoice at the tragic death of Russians are definitely worthy of, at a minimum, censure, and at a maximum - 1 part 282 of article 282 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation ( “Incitement to hatred or enmity, as well as humiliation of human dignity”), which is what happened with the scandalous liberal journalist Bozhena Rynskaya.