Weapon of mass delusion
After years spent personifying cognitive dissonance, has Margarita Simonyan finally lost her mind?

Margarita Simonyan is no stranger to public outrage. But the veteran propagandist and editor-in-chief of Russian broadcaster RT managed to leave pretty much everyone at a loss for words on Monday when she claimed that if Russia detonated a controlled thermonuclear explosion over Siberia, it would knock out communications systems around the world without causing any real damage.
Simonyan went on to explain that triggering a nuclear explosion taking the world back to “about 1993” — a bizarre pitch to make to a Russian audience — would be the humane thing to do, adding that at the very least she would no longer have to explain to her kids “why they don’t have gadgets while all the other children do”.
Simonyan’s comments were met with reassuringly fierce criticism from Russian politicians and officials, with even the Kremlin appearing keen to distance itself from her bizarre ramblings.
“A smart person recently told me something I neither knew nor would I have guessed: If we conduct a nuclear explosion … over our territory, somewhere in Siberia for example, there’ll be no issues on the ground. Nothing terrible at all. No nuclear winter or catastrophic radiation levels that would kill everyone around.”
“We can either accept losing to Ukraine or start World War III. I personally think that the third world war option is more realistic,”

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