What Russian Media Tell Us About LIFE IN RUSSIA



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Russian ruble drops, drones attack Moscow and Russia gets new mobilisation laws – these three events are one of the biggest things happened inside Russia recently. In this video I will show you how Russian state media is portraying these events and what Russians see in their news.

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00:00 Intro to Russian propaganda
00:37 Where Russians watch TV news
02:06 Russian ruble fall
05:38 Drones attack Moscow
09:58 Recent mobilisation updates in Russia

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23 thoughts on “What Russian Media Tell Us About LIFE IN RUSSIA”

  1. 🚀 Try Ground News using my link: https://ground.news/nikiproshin (subscribe before August 31 to get unlimited access for just $5 a month)

    Seeing a ruble getting as low as 100 rubles per dollar, I wonder – what happens to prices and to people's salaries in Russia now? Maybe I'll send our special reporter to film that again. If there's anything particular you'd like to see from Russia – comment here.

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  2. that frog analogy is very true actually, the frog will think if its hot in the water its probably hotter out of the water and will stay until it passes out of heat stroke and die.

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  3. I can't believe that you are happy that your countrys currently is getting weaker.
    Are you really that delusional that you think that it will be better if Russia us under the control of the west?
    You are laughing about drone strikes ,that are considered War Crime since those buildings aren't legitimate targets.

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  4. That lady meant that the Rubel got strong last year due to higher exports and lower importa, referring to gas probably. She‘s saying that exchange rate depends on other currencies not only on the Rubel. That‘s basically all she said.

    I would like to add that she‘s not even wrong but she denies to speak out the facts why the Rubel is dropping. The USD has seen over 9% Inflation or something and still the Rubel lost almost half its value already. So that means Inflation is probably super high right now in Russia, why they increased interest rates. I believe they just print more money to pay back interest rates which leads to more inflation lol

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  5. Update: The Russian ruble is currently worth less than 1 penny (less than 1 cent) USD. It's good to see that you don't hide the truth from your viewers. (like Russia does with its people) Peace Niki.😉

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  6. Yeah the inflationary risks, are cars for instance becoming more expensive because you have to buy them in Euros, Yuan, or Dollars ( people wont accept a risky rouble ) that makes your purchasing power less and that flows to other things you buy like say bread that relies on bread machines or other imported stuff like wheat in the case of China, using the lever of interest rates only works if people are buying homes but if you are in a war zone ( the whole of Russia now ) then you arnt buying homes ( so interest rates have no effect ) you are spending your money buying homes over in other countries to escape war and its draining effect on the economic power of your country … no mortgages mean no effect on economy by interest rate changes … this is just neoLib extremism that the west ( i include Ruzzia here ) that leads to bank runs as people default on their loans … then the government has to use taxpayers money to bail them out … is Ruzzia to big to fail?

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  7. They call, shamelessly, the Ukrainian goverment A KIEV REGIME. I wonder if they'll. ever have guts to think of what they have in Moscow – A MOCOW REGIME? Russia is hated almost everywhere in the world for A REASON!

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  8. I visited Moscow and St Petersburg (Leningrad at the time) in the late 1980’s. The official exchange rate then was 10 roubles for £1. On the black market we were offered 100 roubles for £1. It’s shocking that that’s the official rate (more or less) now. From UK.

    Reply

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