If NATO told liberals to jump, they'd say "fuck off authoritarian redfash tankie".
But there's somebody you forgot to ask, and it's Ukraine.
So NATO says to Zelensky "tell our idiots to jump or you won't get the new F-16". Zelensky does the song and dance and tells liberals to jump, and liberals say how high.
I've been practicing reading Cyrillic lately, let me see if i can transliterate this correctly, i believe it says something like:
Mif o dobrovolnom prisoyedinyenyi
My soglasny - My soglasny - Ya nyet
Vy nikogo nye zabyli sprosit?
Someone who speaks Russian can tell me, is that about right? I can guess the jist of the meaning cause i know the meme format but in terms of actually recognizing the words there are only a handful in there that i know: My, ya, nyet, vy, nikogo (seems related to "nikto" which i know means nobody), zabyli (sounds similar to "zabudyet" which i think is to forget)...oh and myth of course.
Yes i know i could use google translate but i want to be able to eventually at least read Russian and understand approximately what it's trying to say even if i won't ever be able to speak it.
Also can someone explain to me the use of the little "b" looking letter, when is it used and why because so far i just know i'm supposed to ignore it and not pronounce it. The problem with that is i won't be able to properly spell if i pretend it doesn't exist.
Your transliteration is brilliant! And about soft sign, it should soften the previous letter (which should be always consonant). This means you are really not pronouncing this letter but this doesn't means you can ignore it as it marks how you should pronounce the previous letter. You can copy that to google translator: спросит, спросить then click on the voice button and check the difference between those two words (they also have stress on a different syllables but that doesn't matter at all in this case). First means "someone will ask" and second means "to ask".
the meme says: "the myth of 'consensual' reunion. haven't you forgot to ask someone?" where male says "we consent" on behalf of Crimea and female says "we consent" on behalf of Russia and Ukrainian state says "i don't".