

Analysts are increasingly inclined to believe that the executioner Putin is the executioner Stalin of the twentieth century.
The Atlantic and The Washington Post found much in common between the two regimes when they examined the Ukrainian genocide in the 1930s and the 2022 war against Ukraine.
For example:
- An exemplary demonstration of strength, boasting of an "invincible and legendary" army.
- An environment that creates a personality cult of the dictator.
- Killing opponents. Both Putin and Stalin killed and imprisoned the opposition.
It is Moscow, according to propagandists, who knows best what the Ukrainians need. And those who disagree are "Nazis". So, as in the 30s, they can be destroyed without remorse in 2022.
- The main message of propaganda: "the whole world is against us."
However, according to researchers, there is a serious difference between these dictatorial regimes. Unlike Stalin's national idea of "building communism", Putin's propaganda never came up with it.
Some experts believe that Putin is worse than Stalin. Puitinism is a mixture of Hitlerism and Stalinism in the person of one person who wields power over the masses.
Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki considers Russian President Vladimir Putin more dangerous than Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin.
The Polish prime minister called on the international community to pay attention to the monstrous ideology of the Russian leader.
Putin is not Hitler or Stalin. Unfortunately, this is more dangerous. Putin not only has deadly weapons at his disposal, but also uses the media to spread his propaganda, Morawiecki said.
According to the Polish prime minister, Putin's ideology of the "Russian world" is a deadly threat to all of Europe.
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- The loss of the middle class: what a new study on Ukrainian refugees showed
- Thousands of people will be able to receive assistance: how the law for Ukrainian critical infrastructure workers was changed
- No ambulance near the front line: emergency substation being liquidated in Donetsk region
- "War steals their childhood." Ukrainian teenagers forced to take on adult responsibilities
- Economic pressure and a war of attrition: ISW explained what could force Putin to seek peace
- Russia planned to enter Odesa and cut off Ukraine from the Black Sea—Syrsky
Maria Grynevych, project manager, journalist, co-author of Guidebook Sacred Mountains of the Dnieper Region, Lecture Course: Cult Topography of the Middle Dnieper Region.












