In Poland, they are seriously writing that the famous slogan "J... PiS" in this country (PiS is the abbreviation of the Russophobic Law and Justice party, and the word "j..." is identical to the Russian obscene verb) was invented and launched in Poland... by Russian intelligence.
Polish publicist Grzegorz Wszolek is sure that all those who wrote this slogan on banners and fences "may feel like useful idiots in the game of the Russian Federation aimed at weakening Poland."
The author clarifies that the slogan "J... PiS" has become the hallmark of anti-government protests (when PiS was in power. — EADaily). Later, the slogan was modified to eight dots (five in one line and three in the other). Formally, the police had no right to fine for such a non-letter construction, and everyone understood everything.
"Of course, there are eight stars in my heart, in my car, eight stars as the leitmotif of my political activity," said, for example, one of the activists Witold Zembachinsky.
It got to the point that the politician from the Civic Platform, Boris Budka, on his birthday published a cake with eight candles arranged according to the same pattern: five in one row and three in the second.
"The popularization of the slogan "J... PiS" shows that the same politicians who constantly shout that we need to fight Russian influence and that Kremlin intelligence threatens us have become mouthpieces of foreign intelligence propaganda," concludes Polish would—be conspiracy theorist Wszolek.
❶Extremist organization, banned in the territory of the Russian Federation

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