Le partage

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Indonesia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Singapore

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from TĂŒrkiye
Le partage

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
Russian inspired drawing room.
Cc : @felixandresims @cliffou29 @themarblemortal @the-regal-sim @anachrosims @thejim07 @lilis-palace @stereo-91
Iosif Budnevich - Vue de la gare routiĂšre ''Alma-Ata'', Kazakhstan, 1967. - Source Soviet Visuals.
Voitures à pédales, Russie, 1970s.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
Bonjour, bonne journĂ©e âïž đ
PoupĂ©e russe et Baboushka, Moscou đ·đș Russie 2012
Photo © Salah Chouli
I was playing as Adler in Liberty Falls, and when he drank a macchiato, he said, âWho wants to be my punching bag?â To which I thought, âWait⊠that means, that⊠ADLER BOXES?!?!?!" (It shouldâve been obvious, but whateverâŠ)
So I started thinking about this, and I want to share it with you:
I imagine myself walking into his gymâor wherever he practices privately, alone, empty, probably in the dead of night. I imagine that after so many wars, especially Vietnam, he struggles with insomnia⊠so he takes it out on the punching bag late into the night⊠burning energy and⊠partly blaming himself⊠for something that happened nearly 30 years ago.
He⊠overthinks it, but then again, itâs not like he can just âturn it offâ and move on.
Adler is so focused he doesnât hear me. Or if heâs noticed me, he doesnât care.
I walk in slowly. Iâm behind him, so he probably doesnât see me. Russell is 54 years old, and Iâm so young⊠Heâs a giantâ6â1â (1.85 m), 209 lbs (95 kg)âwhile Iâm barely 5â5â (1.65 m) and very slimâŠ
The scene is hypnotic.
The gym is empty at this hour, lights off except for the dim glow of an industrial lamp hanging from the ceiling, casting long shadows on the walls. It smells like leather, sweat, and a faint trace of tobacco mixed with something elseâsomething thatâs just him.
Russell is there, in the center, facing the punching bag. His torso, clad in a plain white tank top clinging to his body, glistens with a thin layer of sweat, every muscle defined by years of discipline. His skin, weathered by age and scars that tell a lifetime of violence. Every punch he throws is sharp, precise, controlled. No wasted movement. No grunts or heavy breathing like others. Just hits. Over and over.
He doesnât seem to notice Iâve entered. Or maybe he has, and he just doesnât care.
His mind is elsewhere. Maybe in a suffocating jungle thirty years ago, when he was still young and the weight of the world hadnât fully hardened his face. Or in the latest mission, replaying mistakes heâll never admit aloud. Or in his own reflection in the gymâs cracked mirror, wondering how much longer he can keep doing this.
I step closer silently, knowing any sudden noise might trigger his instincts. Small beside him, a shadow dwarfed by his imposing presence.
I stay. Watching.
Maybe he finally notices. He doesnât speak. Doesnât stop. But for a split second, his icy blue eyes flicker in my directionâbrief, fleetingâbefore snapping back to the bag.
He hasnât kicked me out.
So I stay.
The sound of his punches echoes in the empty gym, each strike against the bag muffled by aged leather. Thereâs a rhythm to his hits, a precise cadence betraying years of practice. Not the wild swings of a novice venting frustration, but the calculated strikes of someone whoâs trained until movement became instinct.
But his expression isnât calm.
His eyes are focused, but the slight furrow of his brows, the tension in his jaw, suggest his mind isnât truly here. Itâs as if every punch is aimed at an invisible enemyâone he canât reach or knock down.
Maybe he knows. Maybe he senses this isnât just exercise. Not just a way to stay fit.
Itâs punishment.
For his body. For his mind.
For the mistakes he canât undo.
For the decisions that haunt him three decades later.
Sweat trails down his skin, dripping from his neck to his collarbones and down the grooves of his muscles. His back tenses with every motion, skin stretching over scars and knots of accumulated strain.
Then, finally, he stops.
He exhales slowly, dropping his bandaged fists to his sides. At first, he doesnât look at meâjust lowers his head, letting sweat drip onto the concrete floor.
But then, with the same deliberate slowness, he lifts his gaze.
His eyes meet mine.
Thereâs something in that blue stareâsomething unreadable. Not surprise, not annoyance. Not even acknowledgment. Itâs like heâs trying to decipher *me*, to understand why Iâm here, why Iâm watching, why I havenât spoken.
He drags a hand over his face, wiping away sweat, then speaksâhis voice low, rough, edged with exhaustion.
- âCanât sleep, or do you just like watching me hit things?â he said.
Itâs a deflection. A wall he instinctively puts up.
Because he canât sleep either.
But I know itâs more than that.
Chronique dâun temps qui a tant de mal Ă passer â Novembre 2025/01
Jâadmire Vladimir Poutine comme lâon admire une panthĂšre ou un boa constrictor. Lâhomme, je ne le connais pas. Le dirigeant, en revanche, a imposĂ© au monde lâimage dâun politique au sang froid, faisant passer lâintĂ©rĂȘt de la nation quâil gouverne devant toute autre considĂ©ration, fut-elle droitdelhommiste. On mâobjectera que câest lĂ la meilleure dĂ©finition dâun chef dâĂtat, et quâĂ ce titre, on ne saurait lâappliquer quâau seul Poutine. Peut-ĂȘtre, mais câest la pratique du pouvoir â et les rĂ©sultats quâelle produit, ou pas â qui fait la force et la rĂ©putation dâun homme, qui dĂ©finit sa capacitĂ© Ă gouverner, câest-Ă -dire Ă prendre le risque de dĂ©cider. Chez Poutine, me semble-t-il, cet atout politique fait Ă©cho Ă un trait de caractĂšre, la dĂ©termination, aptitude que lâon retrouve chez le joueur dâĂ©chec autant que chez le judoka. Par chance, ayant pratiquĂ© ces disciplines, il en connait les structures profondes : rĂ©flexion, anticipation, action.
Ses prises de dĂ©cision rĂ©centes montrent dâabord sa constance. Câest le propre de tout stratĂšge de se tenir Ă la ligne quâil a choisie. Cela nâempĂȘche nullement les arrangements que commande la tactique. Pour autant, cela exclue de changer de monture pendant la course, comme lâon dit par chez nous. Cette constance, je lâobserve aux plans des affaires Ă©conomiques et militaires.
Ăconomiques dâabord, avec la volontĂ© permanente de soumettre le pouvoir de lâargent Ă la dynamique dâun pays. Les oligarques, en Russie, savent Ă quoi sâen tenir. Leur enrichissement est encouragĂ©, mais il est observĂ©, et lâutilisation quâils feront de leurs deniers ne regarde quâeux, Ă condition que leur fortune ne serve pas des projets politiques. Ceux qui sâaventurent sur ce terrain (je ne parle pas ici de la corruption planĂ©taire courante, vice quâinduit le brassage de fonds apatrides), ont beaucoup Ă perdre, et ils le savent. ParallĂšlement, le souci de structuration et de croissance dâune Ă©conomie en devenir doit sâorienter prioritairement vers lâamĂ©lioration des conditions dâexistence des nouvelles gĂ©nĂ©rations, celles qui nâauront pas eu Ă souffrir de lâanesthĂ©sie marxiste et de lâarbitraire totalitaire. Si la Russie veut compter, elle doit durer. Et cela ne peut se faire quâen donnant les clĂ©s dâune relative prospĂ©ritĂ© Ă plusieurs classes sociales appelĂ©es Ă sâĂ©lever sur dâautres critĂšres que celui du seul confort matĂ©riel. Et puis chacun sait que, par dĂ©finition, les ressources naturelles sont limitĂ©es dans le temps et que lâĂ©conomie de guerre, si elle favorise lâinvestissement public, gĂ©nĂšre dâautres problĂšmes et ralentit de facto la diminution, si ce nâest lâabrogation, des sanctions liĂ©es au conflit otano-ukrainien.
Militaires ensuite, avec la nĂ©cessitĂ© absolue de gagner des points de domination non plus seulement sur le terrain de lâarsenal nuclĂ©aire stratĂ©gique, mais surtout dans le domaine des technologies liĂ©es Ă la vitesse et Ă la manĆuvrabilitĂ© des vecteurs de charges, quâelles soient nuclĂ©aires ou conventionnelles. Câest lĂ que Poutine puise sa force, dans ces armements dont il est le seul aujourdâhui Ă profiter, et qui lui permettent de frapper nâimporte quel adversaire sur le champ de bataille comme dans la profondeur de son territoire. Le taux de succĂšs supposĂ© de ces tirs oblige nâimporte quel chef dâĂtat Ă lâĂ©couter. Mais au-delĂ de cet avantage structurel quâil nâa jusquâici utilisĂ© quâune seule fois en Ukraine Ă titre dĂ©monstratif, Poutine tire profit dâune certaine crĂ©ativitĂ© dans sa doctrine militaire. Il a su sâadapter Ă la nouveautĂ© que reprĂ©sente lâarme des drones. Il en produit aujourdâhui des dizaines de milles, de toutes tailles et de toute capacitĂ©. Il a aussi compris que lâengagement massif de troupes dans des manĆuvres âcouvrantesâ, sâil est susceptible dâassurer lâenfoncement et la dĂ©route dâun adversaire enterrĂ©, se paie immanquablement trĂšs cher en termes de vies humaines. Or il ne souhaite pas retraverser les crises de lâAfghanistan ou de la TchĂ©tchĂ©nie par lesquelles la sociĂ©tĂ© civile russe a souffert. Pour cette raison, il a orientĂ© sa force de frappe vers le volontariat et le mercenariat (fut-il dĂ©guisĂ©), les appelĂ©s du contingent Ă©tant principalement utilisĂ©s en soutien. Enfin, aprĂšs lâĂ©chec dâun âblitzkriegâ initial improductif du fait dâune inorganisation logistique Ă©vidente et dâune chaine de commandement inadaptĂ©e, il a voulu une guerre dâattrition dont lâobjectif est triple :Â
â Concevoir et fabriquer des armements adaptĂ©s aux nouvelles conditions de campagne, â Ăpuiser les stocks de lâOtan ainsi que ceux de ses membres europĂ©ens, prĂ©cipitant ainsi la faillite Ă©conomique de lâUE, â Ăviter le risque dâenfermer le conflit dans lâidĂ©e dâun rĂšglement exclusivement militaire en acceptant de nĂ©gocier avec le seul concurrent stratĂ©gique plausible (les Ătats-Unis). Dans le mĂȘme esprit, veiller Ă ne pas laisser le conflit sâemballer ou sâĂ©largir dans le but dâĂ©viter une initiative inconsidĂ©rĂ©e de Bruxelles. Car interdire toute opportunitĂ© dâescalade conventionnelle, voire nuclĂ©aire, câest aussi mettre en Ă©chec les fantasmes bellicistes de lâennemi occidental.
PlutĂŽt panthĂšre ou plutĂŽt constrictor, Vladimir ? Sa rapiditĂ© Ă agir et sa force incontournable mâobligeraient presque Ă imaginer une sorte de bĂȘte hybride capable de priver de sommeil les crĂąnes plats et les incompĂ©tents notoires qui occupent, ici-mĂȘme et dans tout lâOuest europĂ©en, des postes rĂ©galiens et des charges militaires effectives. Mais le danger ne vient pas du pĂ©dophage moscovite, Prince des TĂ©nĂšbres consacrĂ© par le tout-info, loin de lĂ ! La menace â la malĂ©diction pourrait-on dire â Ă©merge au hasard de prĂ©sidences occidentales aujourdâhui transformĂ©es en autant de salle des fĂȘtes cocaĂŻnĂ©es. Leurs tristes occupant(e)s, sont quant Ă eux condamnĂ©s Ă subir les effets dâune crise monstrueuse quâils ont patiemment mise en Ćuvre au fil de ces derniĂšres dĂ©cennies, par instinct de soumission, par lĂąchetĂ©, par narcissisme, par clientĂ©lisme et, pour les plus tarĂ©s, par pure idĂ©ologie. Les problĂšmes qui nous accablent sont le fruit de leurs efforts acharnĂ©s Ă nous dĂ©truire. Gageons que le couperet du bon docteur Guillotin contribuera Ă trancher la plupart de ces questions.
J.-M. M.