Dlaczego Polska ZAWSZE BĘDZIE LEPSZA od Rosji

📦 OUR STORE: http://globalista.pl 🧭 Geopolitics IG:   / globalista_yt   🌍 DISCORD:   / discord   ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Cooperation and other partnerships: [email protected] 🎯 Short description: Poland vs. Russia - it's a literally never-ending story of mutual claims and fighting. Both sides have a lot to blame. Russian elites literally hate Poland. ⏱ What and when during the video: 0:00 Poland vs. Russia 3:04 Thanks to viewers 4:15 Infrastructure in Russia 7:11 ⅕ of Russians don't have a toilet? 8:45 AM Russians are leaving their country 11:00 AM Russia's wealth and spending 12:17 PM Historic conflicts between Russia and Poland 2:13 PM Russians discredit Poland 4:28 PM What awaits us in the future? 📖 Extended description: Russia stretches 9,000 kilometers from one end to the other, longer than the distance between London and New York, which is 5,570 kilometers. How can such a vast country be effectively governed? Without a doubt, it's incredibly difficult to even be realistic. Instead of focusing on the war with Ukraine, Russia should prioritize infrastructure development. After all, let's be honest, it's exceptionally outdated. While Poland had approximately 3,000 kilometers of expressways and highways in 2021, Russia, which is 51 times larger, had 4,500 kilometers. By 2023, Poland will have almost equaled Russia's. It's truly absurd to talk about such a vast country, which is supposed to be an international powerhouse. To get to Norilsk, for example, with its nearly 200,000 inhabitants, you first have to travel this single-lane road to Tazovsky, and then 440 kilometers by train, plane, or ship. We're talking about a distance roughly equivalent to driving across Poland, where the A2 highway is built, allowing travel at 140 kilometers per hour. Now consider that we're talking about a fairly large and extremely important Russian city in terms of raw materials. It's here that 10% of the world's nickel reserves, 6% of the world's copper reserves, and almost the largest deposits of platinum and palladium are mined. This single city accounts for approximately 1% of Russia's entire GDP—and yet there's not even a road connecting it. According to data from the Federal Statistics Service of Russia from 2022, approximately 10% of Russian cities are not connected to roads. Most of them are small towns and villages located in difficult-to-access regions, such as Siberia or the Far East. Additionally, approximately 20% of Russian cities are connected to roads, but these are unpaved. In Poland, there isn't even a single such city—they might have poor-quality surfaces, but officially, there are no cities beyond the reach of the national road network. However, this isn't the only embarrassing statistic we can speak of in Russia. The Rosstat statistical center itself, in another research publication, reports that 23% of Russian homes and premises lack flush toilets. Similar results are recorded in Belarus. The percentage of Polish homes and premises without flush toilets in the comparable period of 2018 was approximately 6%. Today, in 2023, it is only 1.5%. #poland #russia #war