""Things Look Really Bad": Kremlin Has No Idea What to Do With Thousands of Soldiers Coming Home. - The Russian Dude
This video breaks down one of the most dangerous and least discussed consequences of Russias war in Ukraine: what happens when thousands of traumatized soldiers come home to a society that offers them impunity instead of rehabilitation. Since 2022, at least a thousand people inside Russia have been killed by returning servicemen, not on the battlefield but in homes, courtyards, and everyday civilian life. These crimes are often not driven by profit and are frequently committed by regular soldiers with no prior criminal records. Investigations are dropped, trials are suspended, and perpetrators are redeployed back to the front, turning murder into a bureaucratic inconvenience and sending a clear message that violence is forgiven if you are useful to the state. This creates a system where accountability disappears, domestic violence escalates, and society is forced to absorb the damage while the Kremlin protects the myth of the untouchable war hero.
The video explains how prolonged combat rewires the brain, why PTSD alone cannot explain the surge in violence, and how war-trained aggression, hypervigilance, and emotional blunting follow soldiers home. In Russia, stigma around mental health, lack of therapy, and the glorification of toughness leave families alone to deal with deeply damaged people, often with tragic results. As violence becomes normalized at home and in public, the line between war and peace begins to collapse. Looking ahead, the Kremlin itself fears the long-term impact of hundreds of thousands of veterans returning to an unprepared country. Without massive investment in rehabilitation, mental health care, monitoring, and real accountability, Russia risks long-term social decay, rising crime, broken families, and generational trauma. This video explores why the worst may still be ahead, why denial makes the problem far more dangerous, and why ignoring returning soldiers is a recipe for a much bigger internal crisis.