I think we a had already this discussion 11 months ago. And then (and now) nothing else is given, but the Nuland tapes and articles from that time as "proof" of this conspiracy theory of a "US coup". — ssu
It seems that some modicum of the burden of proof here should be on those claiming the change was caused by the U.S. instead of developments in Ukrainian society in relation to Russian influence. How was that manipulation actually carried out? — Paine
Otherwise, the notion is as vague and binary as the theory on Color Revolutions developed by the Kremlin ... — Paine
Since the violence wielded by the Yanukovych regime was a decisive factor in the growth of the revolution, your planners would have had to have been behind that as well. Pretty crafty. — Paine
The coup speculators... — Paine
Not something planned and controlled from other countries, ... — ssu
The wikipedia article was to make you appreciate the remarkable breath of evidences one can find about the poor status of human rights in Russia (especially under Putin). — neomac
In reality, not everyone can be a winner. — niki wonoto
Anyone that knows the archival record knows that it wasn't just a loose verbiage, but it was a decided policy of Germany and the United States to promise to Gorbachev: No NATO enlargement to the East - and not just East to the GDR. To the East.
You really don't see the annexations of territory done through force as imperialism, really? — ssu
You have to first tell just why, if this all was an American provocation, why did Putin be provoked? — ssu
there is [no] geographic obstacle that would give a natural border for Russia...other than the goddam Pacific ocean. — ssu
The error you seem to think is that somehow the Russian security goals and imperialism couldn't coexist. — ssu
Even just in the Russian Federation there are 35 regional semi-official languages and about 100 minority languages. There is something like 199 ethnic groups in the country. It's not actually something that you would call a clear nation state. — ssu
Annexations of many parts of Ukraine are quite obvious evidence if this for all to see. — ssu
NATO membership, yes, because NATO membership could be and was easily thwarted like Turkey's long standing EU application. — ssu
What your error is the idea that reason for the war is singular, NATO enlargement, ... — ssu
...and that the imperial aspirations are unimportant/fake. — ssu
You really respond to what Mearsheimer said last November 2022 with a lecture that he has given in 2015 as a refutation? (The latter video isn't working) — ssu
Hence talking about "de facto NATO membership" is wrong. Far better would be to talk about Ukraine as a "US/NATO proxy"... — ssu
You have one expert, I take experts in plural ... — ssu
When you are saying that Europeans do not play a role of significance in this conflict, US can solely decide what countries join or not NATO when it's charter say something else etc. I think there's no use to engage in a discussion where you have things so wrong. — ssu
And btw, you fail to give any reasons why you assume that " Ukrainian victory, obviously, which is going to involve NATO boots on the ground" even if asked several times, this discussion isn't really not worth wile. — ssu
So your only "truth teller" ... — ssu
It's much harder to see how censoring a Nazi spreading Holocaust denial is quite so unsavory in motive. — Isaac
Secondly, a bit off topic, but I'd add a point zero to your description of the process. The government's censorship has tracked precisely the enrichment of those industries with the deepest lobbying pockets (pharmaceuticals and arms). It's their drive for profit which initiates the whole thing. Governments don't just decide to have an agenda out of the blue that just so happens to support their biggest donors. They're paid to do it. — Isaac
What may happen to some pornography users is that they become desensitized to sexual images — BC
Isn't this known to be the case scientifically? — Noble Dust
I think the most philosophical problem I can present whist ethical is the objectification of women. — Shawn
It seems to me that male traits are seen in a more positive light than female ones still and that traits like nurturing, caring and kindness and forgiveness are seen as weaknesses. — Andrew4Handel
By whom? I can't think of anyone I know that doesn't value those traits highly. — Tzeentch
It cannot. If the members oppose what the US wants, then the US has to forget the organization and go to bilateral defense agreements. — ssu
Ukraine manoeuvred itself into a grey area where it was both almost a NATO member and almost a US ally. In both cases, what mattered is that the United States would guarantee its independence and provide a credible deterrent against Russia. — Tzeentch
The US didn't decide anything in 2008. — ssu
You simply have false ideas about how international organizations work — ssu
No, you miss the point. If one can stop a defense pact only with the threat of war, then you only maek the threat. Period. You don't go to war. It's called logic, Tzeentch. — ssu
However if you want to reconquer a country and be again a Great Power, what better way to hide your imperial aspirations than by accusing others and try to convince others that your only acting on purely defensive reasons. — ssu
Because why then Russia would attack? — ssu
Now you are totally making things up: the US doesn't make NATO members. — ssu
Israel isn't a NATO member — ssu
Basically the Baltic States and Poland are throwing as much as possible as they can +the kitchen sink to help Ukraine. Yes, they are small, but the European commitment comes to be huge by aggregate: when you add all of the things provided by various nations together, it becomes quite substantial. — ssu
Just the way as the Ukrainian defense minister admits it in the article: Ukraine is not de jure member of NATO, which means that Russia didn't attack NATO, Russia attacked Ukraine. And that is my point: it is Ukraine's war. Hence it is quite expendable. NATO Ukraine is either past lies of American Presidents or now Russian propaganda: both false and only political rhetoric without any connection to reality.
Hence Ukraine's situation is, with similar reasoning, the same as was for the former (now collapsed) Afghan Republic. With that country you could argue similarly that because Afghanistan and it's Former Afghan National Army were trained by the US and NATO, armed by the US and NATO and financed by the US and NATO countries and only having the exception to Ukraine that there were ALSO troops from the US and NATO fighting in the country, that Afghanistan was a de facto NATO country.
And oh by the way, that regime collapsed. And people just forgot about it's humiliating end. — ssu
The Germans actually only showed that this attack (February 24th 2022) wasn't at all about NATO: because German's openly before the attack declared that they wouldn't allow Ukraine into NATO. But guess what: Putin attack and tried to capture Kyiv. — ssu
Although I would like to hear just why you think Ukrainian victory will need is going to involve NATO boots on the ground, as you said here ↪Tzeentch. — ssu
The assistance Ukraine got...which in earnest only happened only after Russia attacked Ukraine. Finland and Sweden have had for a long time have had training exercises with NATO, had the capability to operate with NATO and did participate in NATO operations ...and didn't belong to NATO and had no guarantees from NATO. And membership wasn't going to happen.
And these were two EU countries, which Ukraine isn't.
The big difference is that they applied to NATO and vast majority of the alliance accepted in their own Parliaments and some NATO members have given security guarantees for both countries. Unlike Ukraine. Ukraine's NATO application simply was left aside. No NATO Parliament started to discuss it. You had only vague promises... because NATO couldn't accept that Russia have a veto-vote. — ssu
It's comments like these that make me take them less seriously here. (Sanctimonious indignation or something?) — jorndoe
Nonsense.
Being a member of a mutual defense pact means that other members come to your defense literally. No country has any defense agreements with Ukraine to come to help them in case of war. And Ukraine (foolishly) believed the words of Russia, the US and UK stated in the Budapest memorandum. — ssu
Even if Ukraine didn't enter formally into NATO, by the onset of the Russian invasion it was a full-fledged US ally, barring the fact that the US hadn't guaranteed its independence. — Tzeentch
Wrong. The biggest European country saying NO to membership, with likely a lot more countries having similar doubts was evident and means a lot in NATO. — ssu
Umm...nobody is committing themselves to Ukrainian defense except Ukraine itself and Germany surely isn't. If it sends Leopard 2 MBTs along all other stuff already there, it really doesn't do any difference. The US is sending Patriot missile systems and 150 Bradley IFVs to Ukraine. And they (the US) are training Ukrainian pilots to fly F-16 combat aircraft. So what you are saying doesn't make sense. — ssu
The Germans actually only showed that this attack (February 24th 2022) wasn't at all about NATO: because German's openly before the attack declared that they wouldn't allow Ukraine into NATO. — ssu
Germany, for some ludicrous reason, is now waiting for the US to give tanks too before it will (could?) give Leopards too. — ssu