by Chris Black
I don’t think Putin had him killed.
There’s no obvious benefit in killing the guy, when you’ve already got him rotting in Siberia for the remainder of his miserable life.
RT:
Jailed Russian opposition figure Alexey Navalny has died, the prison service of the Yamalo-Nenets Region, where he had been serving his sentence, reported on Friday afternoon.
The 47-year-old began to feel unwell after a walk, and lost consciousness, according to a statement. Russian media outlets have indicated that doctors pronounced Navalny dead after 2pm local time.
“All the necessary resuscitation measures were carried out, but they failed to achieve a positive result,” the authorities outlined.
The cause of death is being established. However, according to an RT Russian service source, the opposition figure had a blood clot.
Blood clot, you don’t say…
The timeline checks out.
After the alleged failed poisoning event, he was in Germany in late 2020 when the Pfizer vax was first being distributed as an “emergency measure” and he was in some kind of healthcare facility, meaning the vax would have been mandatory.
There is zero chance the Kremlin poisoned him and somehow didn’t poison him enough to kill him.
That makes no sense at all. If the Kremlin was going to kill him, someone would drive by in a car and shoot him, and it would be blamed on any of his various enemies.
The wouldn’t use a bizarre poison and then get the dosage wrong so he survives, then permit him to be flown to Germany for it to be discovered that he was poisoned by the Kremlin.
No part of that story makes any sense.
The West totally backed him as a figure capable of overthrowing Putin, and he started adding democracy and homosexuality to his neo-Nazi platform (just like the neo-Nazis did in the Ukraine – it’s a very fine line between a neo-Nazi and a tranny).
It’s unclear if he was working with them from the beginning.
He might have been, but probably wasn’t, because if he was, they wouldn’t have allowed him to be involved in all of this extracurricular hustling, which amounted to criminal enterprise (along with revolutionary activities, he was convicted of import-export crimes and fraud).
So, he basically got very little traction, because even though a lot of Russians sympathized with his racism, and feel the Russian government should do more to protect Russians from unfair labor competition, especially in Moscow, it’s not enough to get anyone to support an obvious Western shill who is attempting to break apart Russia.
As Putin said in his interview with Tucker, Russia can’t win the propaganda war.
So it is totally irrelevant what happened.