minimalist ones. it is a maximalist candy bar. it s like if you combined all the things in a snickers bar and a milky way and a crackle bar, it s got like carmel and peanuts and puffed rice and a nougat and a cookie and a whole bunch of other stuff in there. picnic bars are like a jambalaya of candy bars. and they re delicious. they re not a big thing in the united states, for whatever reason, although i think you can get them here. i know they are very popular in lots of other parts of the world. here, for example, are picnic bars on a supermarket shelf in russia. and you can see from the little price tag looking thing there that they re listed for 14 rubles each, which is almost nothing. 14 rubles is like 16 cents in u.s. dollars. picnic bars that cheap in russia? no, actually, they re not. this was not a blow-out 16-cent sale on delicious candy bars. you see the description written there in russian. if you translate that into english, it says, this quote, russian soldiers
classic hershey s bar which just chocolate or a heath bar which is toffee in the middle and then chocolate. my favoritee is a payday bar.ay i don t even know what that is. it s basically like peanuts and goo. i don t know. but a picnic bar, on the other hand, is not one of those minimalist ones. it is a maximalist candy bar.ma it s like if you combined all the things in a snickers bar ane a milky way and a crackle bar, it s gotba like carmel and peans and puffed rice and a nougat and a cookie and a whole bunch of a other stuff in there. picnic bars are like a jambalaya of candy bars. and they re delicious. they re not a big thing in the united states, for whatever reason, although i think you can get them here. i know they are very popular in lots of other parts of the world. here, for example, are picnic bars on a supermarket shelf in russia. and you can see from the little price tag looking thing there that they reth listed for 14 ruble s each, which is almost nothing. 14 r
a russian feminist anti-war group founded the day after russiath invaded ukraine. again, this is a home-grown group of russians, that are doing what they can, to try to speak out against the war, and as you see, there are a whole bunch of these, 15 of these that they made, but you can see how under the radar they are, right, they look just like the kinds of price tags that you see on supermarket shelves and you wouldn t notice unless you looked carefully and you look carefully and we translated these, this one the price tag is 20 rubles and what s the item for sale there, it says the russian army has destroyed over 20 medical establishments in ukraine. here s another one. price tag, zero ruble, that might stand out to you, but then what s the description here, it says people i know are hiding from russian bombings in the metro, zero of them are nazis, stop the war. here s one that is listed at 4300 rubles. this is about roughly about 50
bucks. it says stop the war. in the first three days 4300 russian soldiers died. why is this not being talked about on tv? another, price tag 80 rubles. a description here says russian war forces have destroyed 80% of the city of mariupol. what for? i ll show you one more. this one has a price tag eight ruble, quote, i haven t been in touch with my sister from ukraine for eight days. i don t know what has happened toi her. stop the war. the group that put these out, implicitly encouraging russians to print them out and put them up on supermarket shelves in that country. that put this out said on their telegram channel, by replacing something very routine with something alien and unusual, we show that there is not a single place in our country thater will not be affected by the war. we do not let people simply
this war, look what they re doing, inside a russian grocery store, you can see on the shelf there, instant coffee on the top shelf there 400 rubles, five buck force the jar but the description doesn t say instant coffee, the description says the russian army has bombed an art school in mariupol, around 400 people were hiding in it from shooting. that s what it says next to the instant coffee. here s a display of picnic candy bars. again, in a russian supermarket. 14 rubles and the description of that product, it says russian soldiers did not let 14 trucks with humanitarian cargo into the kherson oblast. peaceful civilians there need food and medicine. these replaced price tags in the russian supermarkets have started to turn up and social media and reporters documenting them. but now we ve got kind of a master list, a grid of them that have reportedly been created by