Posted on 05/28/2023 5:46:05 AM PDT by delta7
One thing we do know- Vlad is never, ever giving up his “ new” Russian provinces.
Past Leaders of the Soviet Union added parts of Russia to Ukraine for political necessities.
Now, cause Nazi’s got ahold of the Uke levers of power, Russia takes back what was always theirs
You know exactly, zip.
I love the disgusting Russia propagandists who tell us exactly what definitely for sure guaranteed will happen or never happen.
This is the article where Medvedev says the war will go on for years. With Ukraine? Incredible.
And as for when will Ukraine fall apart, Prigozhin believes it’s Russia that may disintegrate as a result of this war.
And luckily Russia has a few mindless dupes to publish that nonsense here.
Yeah it’s the Nazis. And don’t forget the homos.
/s
Hate and name calling will not help those who celebrate endless war.
.
Now, cause Nazi’s got ahold of the Uke levers of power, Russia takes back what was always theirs
———-
Agreed. Probably the most interesting fact is Ukraine’s current population, verified by many east and western sources: 20 million. The EU states they have near 8 million plus inside their borders, Russia confirmed 3-3.5 million ethnic Russians have returned to Russia, ….western demographic studies state about 22 million left in Ukraine.
The point, they have been depopulated from their pre- war population of 40 million. Add to that their entire male population of 18-60 year olds have been decimated….how does a country with those numbers ever recover? They don’t.
The simplest thing in the short run is for Russia to renounce Stalin’s annexations at Yalta (Lemberg and its hinterlands belong in the EU, whether as part of Austria, Poland or as an independent West Ukraine). The advantage of giving Lemberg/Lwów to Poland would be to accompany it with a reminder that there were other unjust annexations at the same time which could be re-visited in the future.
Or just have Western Ukraine declare itself as “The Republic of Ruthenia”, with L’viv as the capital.
Year | Population | Yearly % Change | Yearly Change | Migrants (net) | Median Age | Fertility Rate | Density (P/Km²) | Urban Pop % | Urban Population | Country's Share of World Pop | World Population | Ukraine Global Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | 43,733,762 | -0.59 % | -259,876 | 10,000 | 41.2 | 1.44 | 75 | 69.4 % | 30,334,632 | 0.56 % | 7,794,798,739 | 35 |
2019 | 43,993,638 | -0.57 % | -252,518 | 10,000 | 40.2 | 1.48 | 76 | 69.2 % | 30,425,950 | 0.57 % | 7,713,468,100 | 33 |
2018 | 44,246,156 | -0.54 % | -241,553 | 10,000 | 40.2 | 1.48 | 76 | 69.0 % | 30,521,470 | 0.58 % | 7,631,091,040 | 32 |
2017 | 44,487,709 | -0.51 % | -225,993 | 10,000 | 40.2 | 1.48 | 77 | 68.8 % | 30,622,539 | 0.59 % | 7,547,858,925 | 31 |
2016 | 44,713,702 | -0.46 % | -207,937 | 10,000 | 40.2 | 1.48 | 77 | 68.7 % | 30,730,872 | 0.60 % | 7,464,022,049 | 31 |
2015 | 44,921,639 | -0.38 % | -174,090 | 26,431 | 40.0 | 1.49 | 78 | 68.7 % | 30,840,974 | 0.61 % | 7,379,797,139 | 31 |
2010 | 45,792,090 | -0.47 % | -219,736 | 53,908 | 39.5 | 1.38 | 79 | 68.6 % | 31,411,663 | 0.66 % | 6,956,823,603 | 28 |
2005 | 46,890,772 | -0.81 % | -389,459 | -33,089 | 39.1 | 1.15 | 81 | 67.8 % | 31,788,197 | 0.72 % | 6,541,907,027 | 27 |
2000 | 48,838,065 | -0.83 % | -413,144 | -92,453 | 37.8 | 1.24 | 84 | 67.1 % | 32,793,567 | 0.79 % | 6,143,493,823 | 23 |
1995 | 50,903,785 | -0.22 % | -111,864 | 14,884 | 36.4 | 1.62 | 88 | 67.0 % | 34,081,946 | 0.89 % | 5,744,212,979 | 23 |
1990 | 51,463,105 | 0.21 % | 108,766 | 0 | 35.3 | 1.95 | 89 | 66.8 % | 34,356,066 | 0.97 % | 5,327,231,061 | 22 |
1985 | 50,919,275 | 0.38 % | 190,680 | 37,818 | 34.0 | 2.00 | 88 | 64.7 % | 32,935,869 | 1.05 % | 4,870,921,740 | 19 |
1980 | 49,965,874 | 0.49 % | 242,042 | 20,877 | 33.5 | 1.98 | 86 | 61.7 % | 30,827,293 | 1.12 % | 4,458,003,514 | 17 |
1975 | 48,755,665 | 0.70 % | 333,362 | 41,241 | 33.3 | 2.08 | 84 | 58.4 % | 28,469,686 | 1.20 % | 4,079,480,606 | 16 |
1970 | 47,088,857 | 0.79 % | 364,862 | 53,753 | 32.0 | 2.02 | 81 | 54.8 % | 25,817,971 | 1.27 % | 3,700,437,046 | 16 |
1965 | 45,264,548 | 1.19 % | 519,979 | 91,154 | 29.8 | 2.13 | 78 | 50.6 % | 22,924,810 | 1.36 % | 3,339,583,597 | 15 |
1960 | 42,664,652 | 1.29 % | 529,032 | -64,464 | 28.9 | 2.70 | 74 | 46.8 % | 19,962,621 | 1.41 % | 3,034,949,748 | 15 |
1955 | 40,019,491 | 1.42 % | 544,369 | 8,785 | 28.3 | 2.81 | 69 | 41.4 % | 16,557,439 | 1.44 % | 2,773,019,936 | 15 |
Year | Population | Yearly % Change | Yearly Change | Migrants (net) | Median Age | Fertility Rate | Density (P/Km²) | Urban Pop % | Urban Population | Country's Share of World Pop | World Population | Ukraine Global Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | 43,733,762 | -0.53 % | -237,575 | 10,000 | 41.2 | 1.44 | 75 | 69.4 % | 30,334,632 | 0.56 % | 7,794,798,739 | 35 |
2025 | 42,338,579 | -0.65 % | -279,037 | 4,000 | 42.8 | 1.44 | 73 | 70.7 % | 29,923,619 | 0.52 % | 8,184,437,460 | 36 |
2030 | 40,882,329 | -0.70 % | -291,250 | 4,000 | 44.5 | 1.44 | 71 | 72.2 % | 29,536,792 | 0.48 % | 8,548,487,400 | 38 |
2035 | 39,425,172 | -0.72 % | -291,431 | 0 | 46.2 | 1.44 | 68 | 74.1 % | 29,198,482 | 0.44 % | 8,887,524,213 | 44 |
2040 | 38,002,489 | -0.73 % | -284,537 | 0 | 47.3 | 1.44 | 66 | 76.2 % | 28,965,081 | 0.41 % | 9,198,847,240 | 51 |
2045 | 36,606,388 | -0.75 % | -279,220 | 0 | 47.3 | 1.44 | 63 | 78.7 % | 28,815,838 | 0.39 % | 9,481,803,274 | 53 |
2050 | 35,219,042 | -0.77 % | -277,469 | 46.6 | 1.44 | 61 | 81.3 % | 28,634,407 | 0.36 % | 9,735,033,990 | 56 |
(includes boroughs, districts, urban agglomerations, etc.)
# | CITY NAME | POPULATION |
---|---|---|
1 | Kyiv | 2,797,553 |
2 | Kharkiv | 1,430,885 |
3 | Dnipro | 1,032,822 |
4 | Donetsk | 1,024,700 |
5 | Odessa | 1,001,558 |
6 | Zaporizhia | 796,217 |
7 | Lviv | 717,803 |
8 | Kryvyi Rih | 652,380 |
9 | Mykolayiv | 510,840 |
10 | Mariupol | 481,626 |
11 | Luhansk | 452,000 |
12 | Sevastopol | 416,263 |
13 | Khmelnytskyi | 398,346 |
14 | Makiyivka | 376,610 |
15 | Vinnytsia | 352,115 |
16 | Simferopol | 336,460 |
17 | Kherson | 320,477 |
18 | Poltava | 317,847 |
19 | Chernihiv | 307,684 |
20 | Cherkasy | 297,568 |
21 | Sumy | 294,456 |
22 | Zhytomyr | 282,192 |
23 | Horlivka | 278,550 |
24 | Rivne | 255,106 |
25 | Kropyvnytskyi | 249,454 |
26 | Kamianske | 248,575 |
27 | Chernivtsi | 236,250 |
28 | Ternopil | 235,676 |
29 | Kremenchuk | 227,494 |
30 | Lutsk | 213,661 |
31 | Ivano-Frankivsk | 204,200 |
32 | Bila Tserkva | 199,163 |
33 | Kramators'k | 173,700 |
34 | Melitopol | 158,000 |
35 | Kerch | 148,932 |
36 | Nikopol | 130,500 |
37 | Syevyerodonets'k | 130,000 |
38 | Sloviansk | 124,800 |
39 | Berdyansk | 118,284 |
40 | Uzhgorod | 117,878 |
41 | Alchevs'k | 116,000 |
42 | Pavlohrad | 115,932 |
43 | Lysychans'k | 111,600 |
44 | Yevpatoriya | 106,202 |
45 | Yenakiyeve | 104,101 |
46 | Oleksandriya | 103,000 |
47 | Kamianets-Podilskyi | 100,000 |
48 | Konotop | 91,798 |
49 | Kostyantynivka | 91,259 |
50 | Krasnyy Luch | 90,005 |
51 | Brovary | 88,506 |
52 | Uman | 87,658 |
53 | Berdychiv | 86,250 |
54 | Shostka | 85,432 |
55 | Kadiyivka | 84,425 |
56 | Chervonohrad | 83,000 |
57 | Izmayil | 82,485 |
58 | Mukacheve | 81,633 |
59 | Bakhmut | 80,500 |
60 | Drohobych | 79,406 |
61 | Yalta | 77,003 |
62 | Nizhyn | 75,499 |
63 | Novomoskovs'k | 73,100 |
64 | Shakhtars'k | 71,700 |
65 | Pervomays'k | 70,746 |
66 | Feodosiya | 68,562 |
67 | Pokrovsk | 68,263 |
68 | Chystyakove | 68,037 |
69 | Sverdlovs'k | 68,000 |
70 | Kalush | 67,698 |
The Ukraine Population (Live) counter shows a continuously updated estimate of the current population of Ukraine delivered by Worldometer's RTS algorithm, which processes data collected from the United Nations Population Division.
The Population of Ukraine (1950 - 2019) chart plots the total population count as of July 1 of each year, from 1950 to 2019. The Yearly Population Growth Rate chart plots the annual percentage changes in population registered on July 1 of each year, from 1951 to 2019. This value can differ from the Yearly % Change shown in the historical table, which shows the last year equivalent percentage change assuming homogeneous change in the preceding five year period.
Year: as of July 1 of the year indicated.
Population: Overall total population (both sexes and all ages) in the country as of July 1 of the year indicated, as estimated by the United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. World Population Prospects: The 2019 Revision. For forecasted years, the U.N. medium-fertility variant is used. Read More Definitions...
Yearly % Change: For 2019: percentage change in total population over the last year (from July 1, 2018 to June 30 2019). For all other years: latest year annual percentage change equivalent assuming homogeneous change in the preceding five year period, calculated through reverse compounding.
Yearly Change: For 2019: absolute change in total population (increase or decrease in number of people) over the last year (from July 1, 2018 to June 30 2019). For all other years: average annual numerical change over the preceding five year period.
Migrants (net): The average annual number of immigrants minus the number of emigrants over the preceding five year period (running from July 1 to June 30 of the initial and final years), or subsequent five year period (for 2016 data). A negative number means that there are more emigrants than immigrants.
Median Age: age that divides the population into two numerically equal groups: half of the people are older than the median age indicated and half are younger. This parameter provides an indication of age distribution.
Fertility Rate: (Total Fertility Rate, or TFR), it is expressed as children per woman. It is calculated as the average number of children an average woman will have during her reproductive period (15 to 49 years old) based on the current fertility rates of every age group in the country, and assuming she is not subject to mortality.
Density (P/Km²): (Population Density) Population per square Kilometer (Km²).
Urban Pop % : Urban population as a percentage of total population.
Urban Population: Population living in areas classified as urban according to the criteria used by each country.
Country's Share of World Pop: Total population in the country as a percentage of total World Population as of July 1 of the year indicated.
World Population: Total World Population as of July 1 of the year indicated.
Global Rank: Position held by Ukraine in the list of all countries worldwide ranked by population (from the highest population to the lowest population) as of July 1 of the year indicated.
Or just have Western Ukraine declare itself as “The Republic of Ruthenia”, with L’viv as the capital.
————-
The US is funding now 100 percent of Ukraine, all government salaries, military payroll, etc. How long can the US flush billions upon billions of dollars down the Ukie toilet?
Unsustainable. One thing is clearer every day:
Ukraine 1991-2023 RIPThe quicker the better.
“I love the disgusting Russia propagandists”
as opposed to the disgusting Ukraine propagandists?
EU and UN demographics say much, much differently.
Or not.
Your worries about money are historically trivial
I said I love you disgusting propagandists.
But I am heartened that now you’re publishing articles that Russia will have to fight Ukraine for YEARS.
The new plan. Vlad deserves awards for his incredible years-long commitment to fighting Nazis in other countries. What a hero.
Unlike the propagandists who tell us exactly what definitely will happen, I don’t predict the war.
However, the signs are that Russia actually is losing and that is just amazingly great.
Yes the Russia ones are much worse, but they did reveal that Russia believes it can’t win.
Yeah I’m going to listen to you and base our foreign policy on childish nonsense.
While we might from time to time disagree on things, I applaud your very fine point. From 1945 and onward through the dissolution of the USSR, until today, borders have changed while those who prefer one border to another argue for some fixed date to say borders must no longer be either in contest or flux. History tells a far different tale.
Personally I think a modern Poland might find "having" Galicia back, if the Azov remnant settle there, would make for a most interesting problem geopolitically.
Recommended source material: https://www.britannica.com/video/135904/history-Poland-borders
and
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv9hj96k.9?seq=6
Additionally, as Yalta's plan was "the earliest possible establishment through free elections governments responsive to the will of the people," it will remain a point of contention whether the Russian-speaking of what has recently been Ukraine actually had that "governments responsive to the will of the people."
For that matter, Yalta -- the Crimea Conference was its other name -- and the Atlantic Charter speak to what is sometimes argued as "self-determination" of a people, whereas such "self-determination" as we watch the Rutte government acting against its own Dutch farmers, or the Biden administration "administering" an essentially open border, many in the Netherlands as in the US, would argue that "governments responsive to the will of the people are not much in evidence today.
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