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When Will It End?

In the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the options are few, and none of them are easy.

Taru Anniina Liikanen
5 min readFeb 26, 2022
JBouchez, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

It’s been a rough week for those of us from countries limiting Russia.

Finnish people have been panic-buying iodine tablets like it’s Y2K ever since Russia took control of the Chernobyl nuclear site. Others are starting to prep for eventual war.

I’m not even in Europe, but I spend my days in futile fights with supposed progressives in Argentina who, out of their deep-seated — and, in many cases, justified — anti-Americanism, refuse to condemn the Russian invasion.

The Argentinian government so far has only given a washed-out statement calling for the end of hostilities on both sides. They call it an “escalation,” not an invasion.

It’s unsurprising that the Peronist government won’t condemn Putin. After all, President Fernández offered Argentina as the “point of entry” to Latin America for Russia only a couple of weeks ago.

It does feel like a slap in the face for those of us who have grown up hearing stories about oppression by our powerful neighbor, both in the times of the Russian Empire and the USSR.

I alternate between Twitter and Argentinian news channels to the one American one I have access to, CNN (apart from Fox…

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Taru Anniina Liikanen
Taru Anniina Liikanen

Written by Taru Anniina Liikanen

Stand-up comedian and recovering political ghostwriter. Finnish by birth, porteña at heart. Bad jokes frequent.

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