Advertisement
Tech

‘Sit y’all mfkn a** down’: Ukraine’s tweet to @Russia leads to flippant replies despite military invasion

Ukraine @s Russia.

Photo of David Covucci

David Covucci

A Putin puppet.

Last night, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered troops over the border into Ukraine, invading the sovereign nation and sparking fears of a much wider conflagration.

Featured Video

The invasion by Russia, which has long had eyes on returning Ukraine into its borders since it left after the collapse of the Soviet Union, was widely condemned by world leaders. NATO described it as a “brutal act of war.”

Unfortunately, even the stark nature of death, destruction, and an entire populace being subjugated by an authoritarian regime, is no match for the crassness of Twitter.

The @Ukraine Twitter account has long been a source of memes and some levity as it endured years of Russian encroachment and aggression. But its latest, in the face of an attack, is being met with flippancy.

Advertisement

Today, it called on users online to tag Russia and tell the state, and Putin, how they feel about its actions today.

Reply guys, apparently, are the first line of digital defense.

“Tag @Russia and tell them what you think about them,” @Ukraine wrote.

In Body Image
Ukraine/Twitter
Advertisement

Some took it seriously, like the Auschwitz Memorial, which shared a statement. Others, as is the nature of Twitter, did not.

https://twitter.com/harismuhd_/status/1496851097989750790
Ukraine/Twitter
https://twitter.com/beIlisperennis/status/1496837945520963584
Advertisement
https://twitter.com/LazyLeftyOG/status/1496870022056194052

That wasn’t the only meme tweet @Ukraine posted, sharing a picture of Adolf Hitler patting Putin on the chin.

https://twitter.com/MikeIsaac/status/1496724728555261952

As of now, it appears that replies to Ukraine’s tweets have not ended the military incursion into its territory.

Advertisement

Read more about internet rights

ISPs won’t quit trying to derail California’s ‘gold standard’ net neutrality law
A new bill might force data brokers to delete everything they have on you
Congress barrels forward with EARN IT Act, determined to end encrypted messaging online
FCC agrees to crack down on ‘sweetheart deals’ that restrict broadband choice in apartments, condos
Sign up to receive the Daily Dot’s Internet Insider newsletter for urgent news from the frontline of online.
 
The Daily Dot