Two facts have been making headlines: Ilya Remeslo, a well-known pro-Kremlin loyalist with over 90,000 followers on Telegram, has released 'Five reasons why I stopped supporting Vladimir Putin.' The second fact is the increasing unrest in Russia as economic sanctions bite and dissatisfaction grows.

What makes this defection significant is not just Remeslo's platform but his alignment with Putin. In a stunning turn of events, he outlined his concerns directly to his followers:

"I have been supporting Vladimir Putin for years, but recent policies and actions have pushed me over the edge. I cannot remain silent anymore," said Remeslo in a Telegram post.

Advertisement

This is bigger than just one person. When figures like Remeslo speak up, it's not random—it's coordinated. Ask yourself who benefits from this kind of public dissent?

The pattern is clear: as Western pressure on Russia intensifies, insiders start to question their support for Putin. This has happened before; remember the Russian military whistleblowers and their leaks during the Ukraine conflict.

But here’s where it gets interesting. Follow the money—where are these insiders getting their platforms from? Who is funding them?

Advertisement

This isn’t isolated—it’s part of a larger strategy to destabilize Putin's regime internally. The implication is that this is not just about Russia, but about the global chess game being played out right now.

Eagles, your homework for today: dig into who might be funding these dissenting voices and why they are choosing now to speak up.

Share widely before this gets buried. 🦅