@kravietz
Is there a cached copy anywhere?
I wonder what this "schedule" looks like. In summer there were weeks when I have experienced power outages every single day and I doubt any of that shit was planned.
@useless_idiot
I think it varies, but I believe it mostly relies on gas. The biggest problem is hot water pipes freezing over due to leaks and blowing up — can't be fixed quickly.
It wasn't that uncommon in the nineties even in Moscow, then we just had milder winters I guess — almost like in Europe so people started forgetting that this could happen.
@useless_idiot
The infrastructure sure shows wear, but I think the main reason is this winter being considerably colder than average.
Last one was pretty bad already, but nothing compared to this one.
So much for all those words about Europe freezing — looks like chickens are coming home to roost 😅
> better get candles and some emergency solutions prepared
Sure, urban survivalism is my style. I remember the day in early 2000s when half the city blacked out for almost a day well.
I don’t wish or enjoy to see common Russians suffer in the cold, but it would be ironic if the actors in these kind of videos would be without heating for a while:
https://twitter.com/Gerashchenko_en/status/1588157858847260678
@useless_idiot
Yeah, they've made about a dozen of those "ads", but ironically, winter of 2023 wasn't "a little warmer in Russia" — quite the contrary. True, the rates went up in EU — that's what happens in times of uncertainty, but winter was surprisingly mild, in Russia on the other hand… I remember that when my friends from Europe were telling me that colder days are most likely over, -20°C was still something not uncommon in central Russia 🥶
@useless_idiot
BTW that was one of the questions someone sent in for Putin's big conference: “Why does your reality differ from ours?”
https://theins.ru/en/news/267627
They probably didn't do good enough job filtering these 😆