Another tiktoker filmed a parody of a Russian soldier.

Many watched the video with the soldier the day before yesterday and were very worried about him, although the video is still from March.

Why is video so powerful?

Not only because our soldier, who is being bombarded with grenades by a drone, is in mortal danger and there seems to be no way out of it.

And not only because he finds in himself the strength and courage to fight for life even in a situation where many would simply be paralyzed with fear and meekly accept death.

And not because by the end of the video, when the soldier, filmed by the indifferent “eye” of the drone, lies in the trench with a small motionless line, the viewer does not know whether he is alive or already dead.

Dull horror penetrates under the skin because the whole essence of modern war is being played out in front of you - technically merciless.

And it's not a game, and it's not a movie.

We do not know what kind of drone it is - remotely controlled by an operator or autonomous.

We do not know if the human operator sees the soldier on the screen and whether he manually controls the release of grenades.

Or, after all, the drone robot aims and kills itself.

But we clearly see the future wars of mankind.

People will be killed at a distance, they are already being killed - hundreds, thousands, and no one stains their hands with blood.

We will be killed in even greater numbers by soulless machines, which are not touched by either a single feat of a soldier or the strength of his spirit.

Robots are not inspired.

But if the drone was controlled by a person, it becomes even more terrible, because a person, knowingly stuffed with inspiration and compassion during creation, is no longer different from machines.

Is it necessary to punish a tiktoker who jokes about the ruthlessness of technology, over an attempt by a courageous only person to repulse the attack of death with his bare hands?

Is it necessary to punish a tiktoker who lies on the floor in his video, kicks, catches something falling from above with his hands?

Definitely yes.

It is good to forcibly take such people to the front-line zones.

You don’t need to go to the front: the tiktoker will get scared, fall to the ground, will not be able to move, let alone catch something falling from above.

However, it is not at all interesting to present him in such conditions.

The main thing is that our soldier was alive.

The point of view of the author may not coincide with the position of the editors.