2021 m. gegužės 27 d., ketvirtadienis
To tell the truth in Lithuania is the most disgusting thing, because it can deter loyal voters
And starving retirees to hunger death is a normal thing. Wild capitalism here, those Lithuanian retirees are only good to be dead as soon as possible. Today, such an ideology emerged among the Lithuanian rulers in all its beauty. First of all, L. Kliunkienė from the Ministry spoke:
"I wanted to ask, why does that old man constantly need that Passport of Opportunity. (...) Here are exceptional cases, well, I don’t know if what a celebration, some, wedding. Isn’t it that he needs it all the time, will he go there to play bowling, or will he go inside the restaurant for lunch, who needs that passport? (...) Is it really necessary here during quarantine? ”- then L. Kliunkienė reasoned"
The governing girls quickly moved to deflate the propaganda scandal:
Pasakyti teisybę Lietuvoje yra bjauriausias dalykas, nes gali atbaidyti ištikimus rinkėjus
O marinti pensininkus badu yra normalus dalykas. Čia laukinis kapitalizmas, tie Lietuvos pensininkai verti tik numirti. Šiandien visu grožiu išryškėjo tokia ideologija Lietuvos valdančiųjų tarpe. Pirmiausia pasisakė L. Kliunkienė iš ministerijos:
Valdančiosios panelės greitai sujudo užpūsti kilusį propagandinį skandalą:
Pratasevičiai, akiplėšiškai skraidydami virš Baltarusijos, pastūmėjo Baltarusiją nuo Vakarų, į Rusijos glėbį
O dabar prašo Vakarų pagalbos, kad išsilaisvinti. Ot kenkėjai...
2021 m. gegužės 26 d., trečiadienis
How does Lithuanian fintech steal?
"The Lithuanian financial technology sector came to the attention of the media last week after an article published by the Financial Times. Until the first months of 2020 Senjo Group and its subsidiaries borrowed nearly $ 350 million from Wirecard. EUR. 100 million EUR of them was credited to Finolitos Unio's customer account. About 35 million. among them, went to Jan Marsalek, a former executive director of Wirecard, who is currently being sought by Interpol. Where did the remaining 65 million end up is not entirely clear. Danas Oliškevičius, head of Finolita Unio, said that part of this money was later transferred to law enforcement."
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