Hi be.open, this is to inform you that threatening physical violence on this forum is not allowed. Are you threatening physical violence on anyone by saying
"I remember you Nazi bastard.... hard to pick up broken teeth with broken hands"?
Or do you mean something else e.g. "I am great a threatening from a Keyboard but I am just Chairborne, the real war scares me and and would pee myself if I ever had to even get close to the real thing."
I do not threaten anyone with physical violence, because I am geographically located in the Southern Urals and do not plan to travel in the foreseeable future. You also do not need to be afraid of me, even if you are zombified by Nazi ideology and support the criminal regime of Kyiv. It will be funny to watch you start changing your jump shoes when Putin says "enough" and ends this operation after the unconditional surrender of Ukraine. You still have time to reduce your tattoos - use this time wisely.
You seem to be calling a Nazi to anyone that does not support Putin. And if it is not a Nazi, then is a "woke". It does not get any easier right?
The problem is that is not true and is easy to check that I am well away from any nationalism and well away from Nazism - perhaps that is why I can tell that Putin is effectively very similar to Hitler (supremacist, militaristic, aggressive, homophobe,...). I am in favour of countries that are not OK with Putin ruling and bullying them around - which is what actually creates nationalism.
I am not particularly afraid of you. I know you do not have any intention to travel - you are on the chairborne unit - particularly, not near what you call "special operation" nor close to any of the ongoing crimes that you are denying in your posts.
I really hope Putin's plan is not an "unconditional surrender" or an army that, as of now, has better morale, more reasons to fight, better diplomatic relations, more help from rich countries, a better knowledge of the terrain, a flow of financial help and weapons, a strong reason to fight, better intelligence sources and even more men on the ground - even if you do not count the less trained volunteers.
The longer it takes for Putin (and the generals) to assume that Russia is no longer the USSR and is not capable of waging war against a reasonably prepared neighbour, the less Russian soldiers will die for him.