Russians 300 don't need enough and 1. "300 don't need - just one is enough!"

source: asiarussia.ru

The title of Hero of Russia should be awarded to Bato Dashidorzhiev, the hero of the “300 is not necessary, one is enough” meme, born abroad. A resident of Mongolia wrote about this personally to the President of the Russian Federation.

The Mongols are not at all indifferent to the actions of their blood brothers in Russia - the Buryats and Kalmyks. Sometimes they worry and are proud of them. For example, the Mongols still call the sailor Aldar Tsydenzhapov "son" and "hero of the Mongolian people." All Mongols know about his heroism.

The Mongols did not disregard the act of Bato Dashidorzhiev.

Mongolian citizen Chuluunzhav Ayanga personally addressed the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin with a request to award the Buryat warrior with the title of Hero of Russia, posthumously.

We publish the request of an ordinary Mongolian citizen addressed to the President of Russia.

“Appeal to the President of Russia V.V. Putin.

Dear Vladimir Vladimirovich, I sincerely ask you to pay attention to the fact of the heroic deed committed by private Bato Dashidorzhiev in the course of his service in the post entrusted to him.

He managed to stand alone against a whole column of motorized infantry of the Georgian army, not allowing them to follow further to escalate the conflict. By doing this, he prevented the deaths of hundreds and hundreds of civilians and soldiers on both sides.

The fact was widely covered at the time by the media of different countries. In connection with this, a “catch phrase” about Russians even appeared in the world: “300 is not needed, one is enough.”

This feat is undoubtedly worthy of the high title of Hero of Russia. He, the heroic son of Russia, died in that war, protecting the innocent inhabitants of Ossetia. I ask you to posthumously award the Hero, we believe in you.

Thank you and I wish you success, for you Truth.

Sincerely yours, Chuluunzhav Ayanga. Citizen of fraternal Mongolia.


source: asiarussia.ru

Recall that last year, social networks around the world bypassed the photo of a Russian machine gunner who fearlessly stood alone in the way of a column of Georgian motorized infantry. It turned out that this photo tells about the events that took place in 2008 after the defeat of the Georgian army. Its retreating units regrouped and decided to return to Gori, but stumbled upon a Russian checkpoint.

The officers of the column threatened the machine gunner to get out of the way and let them through, to which he "sent" them, the media around the world reported. Representatives of the latter, who were moving with the column, also tried to persuade the Russian soldier to leave the road, to which they received the same answer.

As a result, the column of Georgian special forces turned around and moved back to where it came from. Foreign journalists published an article entitled "Russians: 300 is not necessary, one is enough." Immediately after that, it became known that the guy's name was Bato Dashidorzhiev. A few days later he died in South Ossetia.

This is the famous photo. Georgia, 08.08.08 After the defeat of the Georgian army, its retreating units regrouped and decided to return to Gori, but stumbled upon a Russian checkpoint.

The photo shows how one soldier of the Russian Armed Forces with a light machine gun at the ready confronts an entire column of motorized infantry of the Georgian Armed Forces.

Of course, the officers of the column threatened the machine gunner with a weapon so that he would move out of the way and let them through, to which they heard in response “Iditen @ x .. yb ... t”. Then the foreign media, who were moving with the convoy, tried to talk to the machine gunner, and received the same answer. As a result, the column turned around and moved back to where it came from.

Foreign journalists then published an article entitled "The Russians do not need 300 soldiers, one is enough."

I enlarged a fragment of the photo especially for homegrown Nazis and lovers of measuring skulls. Yes, yes - this is the RUSSIAN soldier. And you, with your rulers, are going to hell, to an Austrian artist.

What was this soldier thinking? What did he feel at that moment? Wasn't he scared? Surely it was. Or did he not dream of having children and grandchildren, and living a long and happy life? Of course I wanted to.

Do you imagine a NATO soldier standing like this with a machine gun in front of an enemy column? Me not. They value their lives too much.

Then why are we Russians different? And why do foreigners consider us crazy and unpredictable people?

Donbass, Novorossiya. year 2014. Alexander Skryabin died like a hero, throwing grenades under a Ukrainian tank. Alexander was 54 years old, he worked at the Talovskaya mine as a mining rigger. The deceased is survived by his wife and two daughters. Did his feelings differ from those experienced by Alexander Matrosov, closing the embrasure of the German bunker with his body?

This is embedded in our genetic code and originates from the very times when the first aggressor set foot on our Russian land. It has always been so. At all times. Only chain mail and helmets have changed, spears have been replaced by machine guns. We got tanks and we learned to fly. But the code remains the same. And it always works in us when our house is going to be destroyed or captured. And he does not give us rest if the weak are offended.

Therefore, those who are going to attack the Russians and expect to see kneeling Russians with loaves and flowers on Russian soil will have to be very disappointed. They will see a completely different picture. And I don't think they'll like it.

P.S. People who are in the subject can see that the fighter has a machine gun - PKP "Pecheneg". In 2008, this quite confidently indicates that we are facing a fighter of the Special Forces of the GRU General Staff. Thanks to him - guys like him returned Russia's faith in themselves and pride in the country.

Today in Russia is Heroes of the Fatherland Day.

Hero of the Fatherland Day is another annual holiday in Russia, which is somehow little talked about, and it is undeservedly forgotten. Although in recent years there are more than enough reasons to remember that the country celebrates Heroes of the Fatherland Day on December 9th.

Historically, this holiday is the successor to the Day of the Cavaliers of St. George, which was established by Empress Catherine II in 1769. It was celebrated until 1917, was canceled by the Bolsheviks, and reappeared as Heroes' Day already in 2000.

In the justification for the establishment of a new-old holiday, it is said that "Day of Heroes will contribute to" the formation in society of the ideals of selfless and disinterested service to the Fatherland. Since the formation of at least some lofty ideals at the beginning of the 2000s, the issue has been very acute in our society.

The country has not yet departed from the "ideals" of the primary accumulation of capital and the boundless market, which will put everything in its place. That is, in Russian speaking, from those ideals when the rich get richer even more by robbing the poor, and this was elevated to a certain cult by the then elite.

One way or another, but at the moment the ideals of selfless service to the Fatherland have been formed. Whether thanks to the Day of Heroes, or just like that, the further life of the whole country has developed, but it is enough to recall the news of the past few years.

Here is a simple gas station worker, Arseniy Pavlov, going to Novorossia because "Russians are being killed there" and becoming Motorola. Unbroken and undefeated, vilely killed in the elevator of his own house. A man who is forever inscribed in the history of not only our country, but the entire Russian world.

Here is a policeman from Dagestan, Magomed Nurbagandov, at gunpoint of terrorists who demand that he turn to his colleagues on camera and demand that they stop working in the bodies, says the now immortal “Work, brothers!”. And he also dies, and also remains alive in the history of our country, one of the examples of valor and courage to the very end.

But Alexander Prokhorenko in Syria causes artillery fire on himself in order to destroy the ISIS terrorists and free Palmyra. And causes shock to the whole world with his self-sacrifice.

And there are many such heroes, known and unknown. The commandos who liberated the school in Beslan, alive and dead, the soldiers who were going to liberate the hostages in the auditorium of "Nord-Ost". Soldiers who went through the First and Second Chechen Wars.

Killed and wounded recently in Syria, Russian military doctors who worked under fire to the last. Russian soldiers who saved South Ossetia and peacekeepers who died in August 2008 under fire ordered by Saakashvili.

It's just the first thing that came to mind in recent years. In fact, there are much more such heroes in our country. That is why the West is so instinctively afraid of Russians and Russia, because in our country everyone can turn out to be a hero, everyone in certain situations can selflessly serve the Fatherland, even neglecting their own lives in the name of something greater.

As shown, for example, by the Great Patriotic War, when millions of our ancestors rose in a single formation and reached Berlin. And millions of them died. But all of them, even not yet found by the search engines, are unknown - these are heroes who gave their lives for our lives.

In principle, it is understandable why Hero's Day in Russia is not particularly celebrated, and it is rarely remembered. Because in our country heroism is a "common thing". And there is no need for a separate day so that almost every inhabitant of our country does not understand somewhere deep in the subcortex that if such efforts are required from him, he, too, in certain situations, will do everything to win and in the name of selfless service to the Fatherland.

But what would be good to do in terms of information is to extend this holiday to an external audience. So that our respected "partners" annually remember who they are dealing with, and somehow observe some limits of decency and norms of international law. Because Russian heroism is like that, incinerating with its valor everything and everything unjust and false in its path ...

For our heroism stems from a heightened thirst for truth and justice and an equally heightened understanding that lies and injustice must be destroyed wherever they appear. Putin also spoke about this - that the truth is behind us, and therefore we are stronger.

And Hero's Day in this case could show the world around us with specific examples how the moral superiority of our country and our people looks in practice. How exactly are we ready to defend the truth and what are we ready to do in this struggle.

As for all of us, on Hero's Day it would be nice to remember what glorious compatriots we are, what an honor and responsibility it is. Take their actions as a moral imperative and strive to be worthy of our heroes at least in a small way. So that they would not be ashamed to look at us from their eternity ...

At a solemn reception in the Kremlin on the occasion of the Heroes of the Fatherland Day, President of our country Vladimir Putin said that Russia has always honored and will honor the heroes of the Fatherland and their courage. He said this, which is celebrated in Russia on December 9.

"Heroes of the Fatherland have always been and will be in Russia on a special, highest account. Years pass, even centuries, but their courage remains in the people's memory, in the historical memory of our people. The defenders of Ancient Russia, the Russian Empire, the heroes of 1812 and Great Patriotic War",- RIA Novosti quotes Putin.

During his speech, the Russian leader noted the exploits of the Soviet soldiers who defended Moscow 75 years ago, the Russian military in Syria, and also mentioned the words of the Dagestan policeman Magomed Nurbagandov, who was killed by militants.

According to Putin, these great examples "pride is brought up for our people, for our country, love for the native land."

One such example is a Buryat guy, a Russian man, Bato Dashidorzhiev.

Don't remember? Do not know? Not true. You know by sight. And remember. And the whole world remembered him in 2008.

The guy went out alone against the column of the Georgian army. Bato Dashidorzhiev is the hero of the meme "300 is not necessary - one is enough", born abroad.

Not so long ago, social networks around the world bypassed the photo of a Russian machine gunner who fearlessly stood alone in the path of a column of Georgian motorized infantry. It turned out that this photo tells about the events that took place in 2008 after the defeat of the Georgian army. Its retreating units regrouped and decided to return to Gori, but stumbled upon a Russian checkpoint.

The officers of the column threatened the machine gunner to get out of the way and let them through, to which he "sent" them, the media reported around the world. Representatives of the latter, who were moving with the column, also tried to persuade the Russian soldier to leave the road, to which they received the same answer.

As a result, the column of Georgian special forces turned around and moved back to where it came from. Foreign journalists published an article entitled "Russians: 300 is not necessary - just one is enough." Immediately after that, it became known that the guy's name was Bato Dashidorzhiev. A few days later he died in South Ossetia...

A resident of Mongolia wrote about this personally to the President of the Russian Federation, ARD reports.

The Mongols are not at all indifferent to the actions of their blood brothers in Russia - the Buryats and Kalmyks. The Mongols did not leave without attention the act of Bato Dashidorzhdiev. A citizen of Mongolia, Chuluunzhav Ayanga, personally appealed to the President of the Russian Federation, Vladimir Putin, with a request to award the Buryat warrior the title of Hero of Russia, posthumously.

Appeal to the President of Russia VV Putin.

Dear Vladimir Vladimirovich, I sincerely ask you to pay attention to the fact of the heroic deed committed by private Bato Dashidorzhiev in the course of his service in the post entrusted to him.

He managed to stand alone against a whole column of motorized infantry of the Georgian army, not allowing them to follow further to escalate the conflict. By doing this, he prevented the deaths of hundreds and hundreds of civilians and soldiers on both sides.

The fact was widely covered at the time by the media of different countries. In connection with this, a "catch phrase" about Russians even appeared in the world: "300 is not needed - just one is enough."

This feat is undoubtedly worthy of the high title of Hero of Russia. He, the heroic son of Russia, died in that war, protecting the innocent inhabitants of Ossetia. I ask you to posthumously award the Hero, we believe in you.

Thank you and I wish you success, for you Truth.

Sincerely yours, Chuluunzhav Ayanga. Citizen of fraternal Mongolia.


That famous photo. Georgia, 08.08.08 After the defeat of the Georgian army, its retreating units regrouped and decided to return to Gori, but stumbled upon a Russian checkpoint.

The photo shows how one soldier of the Russian Armed Forces with a light machine gun at the ready confronts an entire column of motorized infantry of the Georgian Armed Forces.

Of course, the officers of the column threatened the machine gunner with a weapon so that he would move out of the way and let them through, to which they heard in response “Iditen @ x .. yb ... t!”. Then the foreign media, who were moving with the convoy, tried to talk to the machine gunner, and received the same answer. As a result, the column turned around and moved back to where it came from.


I enlarged a fragment of the photo especially for homegrown Nazis and lovers of measuring skulls. Yes, yes - this is the RUSSIAN soldier. And you, with your rulers, are going to hell, to an Austrian artist.

What was this soldier thinking? What did he feel at that moment? Wasn't he scared? Surely it was. Or did he not dream of having children and grandchildren, and living a long and happy life? Of course I wanted to.

Do you imagine a NATO soldier standing like this with a machine gun in front of an enemy column? Me not. They value their lives too much.

Then why are we Russians different? And why do foreigners consider us crazy and unpredictable people?

Donbass, Novorossiya. year 2014. Alexander Skryabin died like a hero, throwing grenades under a Ukrainian tank. Alexander was 54 years old, he worked at the Talovskaya mine as a mining rigger. The deceased is survived by his wife and two daughters. Did his feelings differ from those experienced by Alexander Matrosov, closing the embrasure of the German bunker with his body?

This is embedded in our genetic code and originates from the very times when the first aggressor set foot on our Russian land. It has always been so. At all times. Only chain mail and helmets have changed, spears have been replaced by machine guns. We got tanks and we learned to fly. But the code remains the same. And it always works in us when our house is going to be destroyed or captured. And he does not give us rest if the weak are offended.

Therefore, those who are going to attack the Russians and expect to see kneeling Russians with loaves and flowers on Russian soil will have to be very disappointed. They will see a completely different picture. And I don't think they'll like it.

P.S. People who are in the subject can see that the fighter’s machine gun is the Pecheneg PKP. In 2008, this quite confidently indicates that before us is a fighter of the Special Forces of the GRU General Staff. Thanks to him - guys like him returned Russia's faith in themselves and pride in the country.

The Mongols turned to Putin to give the Hero of Russia Bato Dashidorzhiev posthumously.
The title of Hero of Russia should be awarded to Bato Dashidorzhiev - the hero of the meme "300 is not necessary, one is enough", born abroad. A resident of Mongolia wrote about this personally to the President of the Russian Federation, ARD reports.

The Mongols are not at all indifferent to the actions of their blood brothers in Russia - the Buryats and Kalmyks. Sometimes they worry and are proud of them. For example, the Mongols still call the sailor Aldar Tsydenzhapov "son" and "hero of the Mongolian people." All Mongols know about his heroism.

The Mongols did not leave without attention the act of Bato Dashidorzhdiev. Mongolian citizen Chuluunzhav Ayanga personally addressed the President of the Russian Federation, Vladimir Putin, with a request to award the Buryat warrior with the title of Hero of Russia, posthumously.

“Appeal to the President of Russia V.V. Putin.
Dear Vladimir Vladimirovich, I sincerely ask you to pay attention to the fact of the heroic deed committed by private Bato Dashidorzhiev in the course of his service in the post entrusted to him.
He managed to stand alone against a whole column of motorized infantry of the Georgian army, not allowing them to follow further to escalate the conflict. By doing this, he prevented the deaths of hundreds and hundreds of civilians and soldiers on both sides.
The fact was widely covered at the time by the media of different countries. In connection with this, a “catch phrase” about Russians even appeared in the world: “300 is not needed, one is enough.”
This feat is undoubtedly worthy of the high title of Hero of Russia. He, the heroic son of Russia, died in that war, protecting the innocent inhabitants of Ossetia. I ask you to posthumously award the Hero, we believe in you.
Thank you and I wish you success, for you Truth.
Sincerely yours, Chuluunzhav Ayanga. Citizen of fraternal Mongolia.

Last year, a photo of a Russian machine gunner who fearlessly stood alone in the path of a column of Georgian motorized infantry went around social networks around the world. It turned out that this photo tells about the events that took place in 2008 after the defeat of the Georgian army. Its retreating units regrouped and decided to return to Gori, but stumbled upon a Russian checkpoint.

The officers of the column threatened the machine gunner to get out of the way and let them through, to which he "sent" them, the media around the world reported. Representatives of the latter, who were moving with the column, also tried to persuade the Russian soldier to leave the road, to which they received the same answer.

As a result, the column of Georgian special forces turned around and moved back to where it came from. Foreign journalists published an article entitled "Russians: 300 is not necessary, one is enough." Immediately after that, it became known that the guy's name was Bato Dashidorzhiev. A few days later he died in South Ossetia.

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