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Fuck yeah!

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 19:31

https://www.armstrongeconomics.com/armstrongeconomics101/basic-concepts/us-breakup-becoming-more-mainstream/

Our computer model projects that eventually the USA will break into regions as power devolves back to where it was usurped – to state rights. The growing level on tension with federal taxation, Obamacare, and the banks holding the nose around the neck of Washington will combine to force the ultimate breakup of the USA.

Die die die bitch, we don't want your hamburgers anymore, and fuck Hollywood and fuck your diversity and tolerance.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 19:38

>>1
Nostrovia, Ivan!

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 19:38

>>2
What's a Nostrovia?

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 19:48

>>3
"Hello" in russian.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 19:59

>>4
"Hello" is Privet or Zdorovo or Zdravstvuy. "Nostrovia" doesn't actually mean anything.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:04

>>5
"Nostrovia" mean "на здоровье" - literally "good vodka to you", similarly to "Shalom Aleikhem", which means peace to you.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:04

>>3,4,5

According to Urban Dictionary, "Nostrovia" is a mispronunciation of "Na Zdorovie", meaning "to good health" or "cheers".

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:07

>>7
it has nothing to do with good health, but more about drinking vodka until one feels good (by russian standards).

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:09

>>6-7
OK, but it's never used as a greeting.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:13

>>8
No, when drinking you say "tvoyo zdorovie" or "vashe zdorovie", meaning "[here's to] your health".

"Nazdorovie" means either "I'm fine with it" or a filler akin to "there you go", e.g. when the guy at a food store hands you what you asked for.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:13

>>9
It is used, especially to greet drunk russian comrade in the village setting (most of the russia). I'm citizen of Russia, so I know what I'm talking about.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:15

>>10
You're wrong. Russian is hard and ugly language, so it is easy to get it wrong. I'll tell you that as a russian citizen.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:21

>>10
it is also used as an insult:
Natasha: Ivan is drunk again! He sold our children to pedophile to buy vodka.
Taras: no ztrovia, pidoras!
Ivan: hiccup.. watcha pidars talking about me?

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:45

>>11
You're lying, and I doubt you're a citizen of Russia.

>>13
It's never used as an insult. A wish of health as an insult? Keep bullshittin'.

And if anyone doesn't believe me, here's a prooflink.

https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080125002012AAxasnu

however Na Zdorovie means "You're Welcome".

Like I said, it's used as "there you go" (== "you're welcome").

It is a toast to one's good health. This is mostly heard many times during Polish, Czech, Slovak Wedding Receptions

As for the "Nostrovia" meme, it's not from Russian but from Western Slavic languages despite whatever >>12 is lying.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:52

>>14
I'm not lying. I even have a facebook page in russian: https://www.facebook.com/nikita.sadkov.3

yahoo answers are the worst place to use for any reference. Even wikipedia holds more water.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:54

a collage of typical russians in their natural environment:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GkVPwVdwJxI

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:55

>>15
Here's wiktionary for you:

cheers! (a drinking toast used in American movies about Russians, but not used by Russians).

https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%D0%BD%D0%B0_%D0%B7%D0%B4%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%B2%D1%8C%D0%B5

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 20:58

Even in the edit history, my version is confirmed:

18:53, 31 July 2010‎ 99.30.135.252 (talk)‎ . . (262 bytes) (-57)‎ . . (Nobody in Russia says "Na zdorovje" before drink, it's a widespread myth. "Na zdorovje" means only "you're welcome". I'm Russian myself.)

>>15 is lying.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 21:06

>>17
The edit was likely unrolled, becuase it was done by russian state propaganda, which wants to whitewash any mentions of russian alcoholics or the real russian culture at all. So now there are
to your heart's content
do as you want at your own risk, be my guest (sarcastically)

which are closer to real meaning. But as I said, one russian's greeting can also be another russian's insult. I.e. it is not your Israeli `Shalom` which has single well defined meaning.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 21:09

>>18
also, there are a lot of russians. Say Jewish or Armenian russians don't say "nostrovie" while drinking, but real finno-ugric russians do use the word.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 22:32

I trust Nikiketa over the other guy.

Anyway, the US is not going to break apart. There will be war before that.

Name: Anonymous 2016-05-15 22:51

this will never happen, liberals will whine too much. States rights have been losing since the beginning of the U.S.A just look at the civil war.

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