This is old Soviet Style whataboutism:
The discord of American politics, U.S. military engagements abroad, the English-language dark web—all these offer myriad opportunities for criticism. And Russian President Vladimir Putin
took advantage of them with gusto after his June 16 Geneva summit with U.S. counterpart Joe Biden.
One journalist called Putin’s deft deflection of tough questions from reporters “a masterclass in whataboutism”—which might be defined as the strategic practice of countering criticism with an accusation of wrongdoing against the criticizer, implying hypocrisy and/or disregarding circumstances that could weaken the latter charges, but not addressing the original criticism.
This tactic was frequently employed by the Soviet Union in response to Western criticism of its domestic and foreign policies, with America most often in the crosshairs. One early use of whataboutism—a term
coined much later in the West—followed a speech made by then U.S. Secretary of Commerce W. Averell Harriman in 1947, in which he
warned that Soviet totalitarianism was “a new and more threatening imperialism.” In response to Harriman’s remarks, Soviet writer Ilya Ehrenburg published a commentary in Pravda that the Christian Science Monitor
described1 as saying that Americans wanted “to drop atom bombs on the Soviet Union because they do not like its social order” but that the Soviet people, “though they consider racial laws and slavery in the southern states of the United States insulting to human dignity, do not intend on that account to turn modern weapons against Mississippi or Georgia.” Ehrenburg also asked how the United States could be disgusted by Nazi atrocities when it has, in the Monitor’s rendition, “ghettoes for Negroes and lynch courts?” By the time the Soviet Union collapsed, accusations of America “lynching Negroes” had become a punchline for irreverent jokes about Soviet officialdom’s own hypocrisy and, as an Economist correspondent
wrote in 2008, “a synecdoche for Soviet propaganda as a whole.”
Post-Soviet Russia took up its predecessor’s tactics as it sought to shield itself from Western criticism. Like the online disinformation reportedly spread by Russian troll farms, whataboutisms can mix substantive criticism of U.S. foreign and domestic policy with falsehoods and spurious equivalencies, like
comparing the state-backed use of illegal performance-enhancing drugs by government-sponsored Russian athletes with the use of Chinese traditional medicine by U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps.
russiamatters.org
You are supposed to be posting about how Putin,
heroically and in defiance of the West, is really actually winning and purging Ukraine of not only nazis but also covid producing labs. Where are the posts about the nazi biolabs that the
real nazis "nazi Hunters" are looking for in Ukraine ?


Is the US Fauci actually just a husk because his mind has been transplanted into the body of Zelensky so he can more efficiently create Soros labs which can only be defeated by copious use of horse paste?