How Sanctions on Russia are helping Putin ๐Ÿ‡ท๐Ÿ‡บ

Channel:
Subscribers:
1,210,000
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g99VxCjZvjQ



Category:
Let's Play
Duration: 28:07
186,065 views
13,775


SUPPORT THE CHANNEL/DONATE:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC19xLluI7dG093Gmw57BhHw/join
I left Russia 1.5 years ago, and every since then I've been keeping up with Russian propaganda, Russian economy and how sanctions on Russia work. Well, it turns out that sometimes they don't work as they were supposed to - many today claim that EU sanctions against Russia are failing.
In my opinion, several examples of EU sanctions actually help Putin more than inconvenience him, and more often than not the decisions and statements made by Western politicians basically feed right into Russian propaganda about how THE WEST WANTS TO DESTROY RUSSIA.
In this video we'll look at those few examples. Sanctions removed from Russian oligarchs? Check. Blatant hypocrisy? Check. Taking away personal possessions at the border? Check. Going after the average joe instead of the actual benefactors of Putin's regime? Check. I'll also talk about the recent drama regarding Russia featuring the Czech president Petr Pavel and Estonian PM Kaja Kallas. Ready for a controversial video?Strap in and let's get into it.
---------------------------------
SUPPORT ME ON PATREON: โ€‹https://www.patreon.com/nfkrz
Instagram โ–บ https://www.instagram.com/roman_nfkrz/

00:00 The Problem with Russian Sanctions
02:10 Sanctions vs Sanctions for Oligarchs
06:05 The West Still Sponsors Putin
09:07 Czechia's Petr Pavel and Russia
15:19 Estonia's Kaja Kallas and Russia
20:58 Conclusion, I guess







Tags:
russia
sanctions on russia
sanctions are failing
sanctions failed
russia under sanctions
russian economy
russian economy growing
russian propaganda
life in russia
europe
ukraine
nfkrz
z propaganda
russian currency
russians fleeing
russia visa ban
good russians
eastern europe
russian review
how putin fooled the west
putin and the west
russia ideology
soviet
ussr
post soviet
russia new mcdonalds
russia replaced brands
russian replacement