Joined October 2011
80 Photos and videos
Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Evo zašto su bezgrešni bezgrešni.

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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Please NBA, bring back the Where Amazing Happens campaign #NBAFinals #Knicks
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
When MJ was asked about LeBron James teaming up with Wade & Bosh in Miami: "There's no way, with hindsight, I would've ever called up Larry, called up Magic and said, 'Hey, look, let's get together and play on one team.' In all honesty, I was trying to beat those guys."
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
A remarkable video: Putin, an obscure 1991 Leningrad bureaucrat, warning against the return of totalitarian rule to Russia—paired with his reaction to those words as President in 2002. The irony writes itself.
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Larry Bird won NBA Rookie of the Year after receiving 60 of 62 media votes.. The only other votes went to Magic Johnson.. That was 46 years ago today..
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Zašto moramo u EU? Pa zato što samo u EU policija može da napravi raciju u stranci Premijera Španije
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Interesting excerpts from the memoirs of Supreme Allied Commander General Dwight D. Eisenhower (later President of the United States from 1953–1961) about Marshal Georgy Zhukov: “During the several hours we spent together in the airplane, Marshal Zhukov and I often discussed military operations... A great revelation to me was his description of the Russian method of attacking through minefields. German minefields, covered by enemy defensive fire, were tactical obstacles that caused us heavy casualties and many delays. Breaking through them was always difficult, despite the fact that our engineers had invented every imaginable mechanical device for the safe clearing of mines. Marshal Zhukov casually remarked to me: ‘There are two kinds of mines: antipersonnel and antitank. When we encounter a minefield, our infantry continues the attack as though it were not there at all. We consider the losses from antipersonnel mines to be equal to the losses we would have suffered had the Germans defended that sector with concentrated manpower instead of minefields. Advancing infantry does not detonate antitank mines, so once they have crossed the minefield and secured the opposite side, the engineers then come forward and clear lanes through which vehicles can pass...’ I could vividly picture what would have happened to any American or British commander who attempted to use such tactics, and an even clearer picture of what the men in any of our divisions would have said if we had tried to make such practices part of our tactical doctrine... Americans measure the cost of war in human lives, while the Russians measure it in the total expenditures of the nation. As far as I could see, Zhukov cared little for the methods we considered essential to maintaining the morale of American troops: systematic rotation of units, opportunities for rest and recreation, short leaves, and above all the development of methods designed to avoid exposing men to combat risks that were not absolutely necessary. All of this, common practice in our army, was largely unknown in his army. ...The fundamental difference between American and Russian attitudes toward the treatment of people was illustrated in another incident. In a conversation with a Russian general, I mentioned the difficult problem of caring for large numbers of German prisoners of war — a problem we faced at various stages of the war. I noted that we gave German prisoners the same food ration as our own soldiers. ‘Why would you do that?’ Zhukov exclaimed in astonishment. I replied that, first of all, my country was bound to do so under the Geneva Conventions. Secondly, thousands of American and British servicemen were prisoners in German camps, and I did not want to give Hitler any excuse to treat them even worse than he already did. Zhukov was even more astonished by this answer and exclaimed: ‘But why should you care about soldiers captured by the Germans?! They were prisoners already and could no longer fight anyway!’ The excerpts are quoted from Dwight D. Eisenhower, Crusade in Europe, The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997 (first published in 1948), pp. 468–470. Interestingly, in the Russian translation of Eisenhower’s memoirs (2000 edition), these passages — seemingly of particular interest to Russian readers — were removed. Everyone shouting “we can do it again” should remember that they would be sent to fight using Zhukov’s methods and traditions.
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Napustila nas je još jedna svetla tačka borbe za demokratiju. Dragoljub Mićunović. Čovek koji je ceo svoj život posvetio Srbiji da bude demokratska zemlja. Profesor, naučnik, državnik. Preteča Zorana Đinđića i čovek koji nam je stvorio Đinđića. Umro je, a da nije video ponovo demokratsku Srbiju.
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Највредније што ова држава има!
Replying to @Univerzitet_BG
@Univerzitet_BG u top 10 evropskih univerziteta po zapošljivosti svojih diplomaca.
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Massive protests in Belgrade 🇷🇸, but with the opposition without clear leadership it’s still possible for the regime to clinch to power for some time more.

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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Putin didn't invade Ukraine because of NATO. He invaded because Ukrainians were proving democracy works. Historian and Pulitzer Prize winner Anne Applebaum puts it plainly: Putin looked at Ukraine's democratic movement and thought, "If they can do it in Ukraine, then people could do it in Russia. So I need to crush this." That's the real threat Ukraine posed. Not missiles. Not borders. A working democracy next door. Applebaum frames the war as a fault line between the democratic and autocratic worlds. Russia isn't just trying to take territory. It's trying to erase Ukraine as a nation, reduce it to a colony, and send a message to every country that the post-1945 rules of Europe no longer apply. Those rules were simple: no invasions, no wars, borders don't change by force. Russia understood exactly what it was breaking when it crossed into Ukraine.
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
14,000 dead, including over 10,000 Ukrainian and Russian soldiers who shouldn't have been there, and 3,400 civilians, including 300 killed by the Russians on flight MH17. What genocide are you talking about?
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One of the biggest mistakes of 21st century is Merkel. Because she is the one that was against Ukraine in 2008 when George W. Bush want them in to NATO with Georgia. And now Merkel is getting European Order of Merit. Horrible. Whose idea it was to gave it to her?
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Russia is just a shrinking ex-empire high on 1945 nostalgia.
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Путин посмеялся над экономикой Германии и посоветовал немцам повышать зарплаты, а не противостоять России. Германия Средняя зарплата: €4928 Минимальная зарплата: €2343 Средняя пенсия: €1836 Россия Средняя зарплата: €565 Минимальная зарплата: €319 Средняя пенсия: €231
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Aged like milk
Russian state TV mocks Ukraine's air raid sirens
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
"We forced Ukraine to give up nuclear weapons, cruise missiles, and strategic bombers. We promised to protect Ukraine from Russia. We made Ukraine vulnerable. So yes, this is our war.." - Bill Clinton 🫡
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
‼️The mystery of the collapsing Russian economy has been solved! It was growing way too fast, and now it needs to cool down. 🙄 “We were growing and, moreover, even outpacing growth in the American economy.” — Maxim Reshetnikov, Minister of Economic Development, at a meeting with Putin.
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Путин: «В западной культуре на первом месте всегда материальное благополучие. А в России нет. У нас на первом месте всегда морально-нравственное начало». Морально-нравственное начало: Миллер - 138 000 000 руб в мес Сечин - 124 000 000 руб в мес Греф - 91 000 000 руб в мес
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Бојан Самарџија retweeted
Čovek kome se podsmevaju svi kremaljski nalozi od malteških vitezova preko mariozna i specnaza je Žolt Hegeduš '69 godište, ortopedski hirurg koji sa mesta načelnika bolnice u Mančesteru dolazi za ministra zdravlja. U slobodno vreme je otac 4 dece.
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