Then why are so many try to emigrate there, or in Europe? — Olivier5
why do you think Algeria was in such a shitty position to begin with? Well, because it had been plundered and turned to shit by the countrymen of a certain poster here. Everything follows from that. — Streetlight
It's just usually that when you don't have anything to say, any actual objections on the topic, anything to counter the arguments, some people then resort to ad hominems. — ssu
They made it clear from the start that they are not interested in the actual topic, and instead want continue to talk about what they talk about in every other political thread: the villainy of US, the evils of capitalism, etc. — SophistiCat
The vast majority of people would never have heard of Ukraine if all that happened was what's happening in Somalia. — Baden
Nothing I said involved taking a position on U.S. troops in Somalia. It's consistent to be absolutely against that move — Baden
You still have your pro-American flag waving. I don't know what to say about that. — frank
You're outraged anew every time you learn this stuff. — frank
Somalis that I've talked to long for the times of Siad Barre. Again someone you wouldn't be in favour. — ssu
A national flag is usually the government of the country. It's used by the government in charge. The Somali government is happy to see American troops in Somalia. — ssu
"Stand with Somalia" with the Somali flag in the background isn't interpreted the way you think. At least the twitter handle StandWSomalia is pro-Goverment — ssu
Except I've said about the mistakes like the Kosovo war and of course leaving Ukraine hanging dry with promises of NATO membership in the distant future. Or how stupid the post-Cold War era "New NATO" thinking was and how only now, after 2014 and 24th of February this year NATO has found itself again. — ssu
The mere mention that when a country annexes parts of another, it's main objective isn't to stop the enlargement of a third party international organization seems to be blasphemy for some. — ssu
Moral responsibility rests not with the every actor along the causal chain, but upon the actor who interrupts that causal chain with a specific intentional act resulting in the specific bad act. — Hanover
That could very well be true, but if we define capitalism as being what it is because of its relationship of one class to another, then it's this relationship which should be the target -- and so abolishing this relationship topples capitalism. I think worker ownership/control can do that -- co-ops being one model, a step beyond unionism. — Xtrix
private property can exist in a non-capitalist system as well...as can markets...as can profit-making. — Xtrix
while worker control doesn't solve the problem of private property, it would be tending in that direction. — Xtrix
China has gone much further than the US towards your point, with limited rights on private property -- yet they too have capitalist enterprises (in the sense I mean). — Xtrix
extremely unhappy about anything taking the focus off from how the bad the US is. — ssu
But my (perhaps nitpicking) point was about abolishing capitalism (as I understand it) rather than every necessary condition for capitalism. That’s what my initial question was getting at: if we’ve eliminated the employer/employee (or owner/worker) distinction, then we’ve eliminated the one feature that (arguably) distinguishes capitalism from other socioeconomic forms— like feudalism. — Xtrix
I don't think anything was going to deter Putin from invading Ukraine except its membership in NATO. He thought he could just waltz in and take over the country. — RogueAI
And same stupid arguments are given on page 245 as in the early 10's and 20's. — ssu
It really wasn't about Minsk protocols or NATO enlargement. That should be obvious when the leader starts to talk about denazification. — ssu
the eastward expansion of NATO
the leading NATO countries
security in Europe
the North Atlantic alliance continued to expand
a bloody military operation was waged against Belgrade
The bombing of peaceful cities and vital infrastructure
Then came the turn of Iraq, Libya and Syria. The illegal use of military power against Libya and the distortion of all the UN Security Council decisions on Libya
The combat operations conducted by the Western coalition in that country without the Syrian government’s approval or UN Security Council’s sanction can only be defined as aggression and intervention.
the invasion of Iraq without any legal grounds
in many regions of the world where the United States brought its law and order, this created bloody, non-healing wounds and the curse of international terrorism and extremism.
Just lies and hypocrisy all around.
the whole so-called Western bloc formed by the United States in its own image and likeness is, in its entirety, the very same “empire of lies.”
they sought to destroy our traditional values and force on us their false values that would erode us, our people from within
in December 2021, we made yet another attempt to reach agreement with the United States and its allies on the principles of European security and NATO’s non-expansion. Our efforts were in vain.
Those who aspire to global dominance have publicly designated Russia as their enemy.
Even now, with NATO’s eastward expansion the situation for Russia has been becoming worse and more dangerous by the year.
Any further expansion of the North Atlantic alliance’s infrastructure or the ongoing efforts to gain a military foothold of the Ukrainian territory are unacceptable for us.
the question is not about NATO itself. It merely serves as a tool of US foreign policy.
For the United States and its allies, it is a policy of containing Russia, with obvious geopolitical dividends. For our country, it is a matter of life and death
the forces that staged the coup in Ukraine in 2014 have seized power, are keeping it with the help of ornamental election procedures and have abandoned the path of a peaceful conflict settlement.
Focused on their own goals, the leading NATO countries are supporting the far-right nationalists and neo-Nazis in Ukraine
It's a common misconception to think that others are as ignorant as you are and just follow what is on the mainstream evening news. — ssu
it was simply obvious. If you had followed anything about security policy in both countries. — ssu
Significance is highly subjective. Some people like slavery, others don't. — Olivier5
This assumes that a victorious Russia would not have jailed, tortured, rapped and assassinated the civilians under their control. — Olivier5
I'm just calling out your bullshit thinking you know even surface-level stuff of what is going on in Sweden and Finland. — Christoffer
And you are a professor who fights against the norms by stating education isn't needed, so how on earth can we take you seriously. — Christoffer
So glad the epicentre of neo fucking Nazism in Europe is getting flooded with weapons after being destabalized to shit hey? — Streetlight
Ukraine is believed to have one of the largest arms trafficking markets in Europe. — Global Organised Crime Index
Will have to change my social media profile to a little Somalian flag in solidarity in the meantime. — Streetlight
The combined flow of information depends on who you know and what the official discussion is in media and online. Just because you're in a bubble of guesswork does not mean everyone is. — Christoffer
On top of that, you don't have the information flow that exists here, you do not watch Swedish news, media, or discussions that we have, all you have are from anyone sharing that information, with their interpretation filter and media reporting with the perspective of your nations — Christoffer
Sweden and the nordic nations, in general, have one of the lowest biases in media in the world. So it's easier to sift through the information flow — Christoffer
Bottom line is that if the information sources you describe are your only sources, then you definitely don't have enough insight to question what I present about our situation in Sweden. — Christoffer
When it comes to discussions about our military, security and identity as nations, I know more than you since I live within this information 24/7, while you have to filter it through outside reports, translations, cultural interpretations, media etc. — Christoffer
Are they secret? — Isaac
Yes — Christoffer
We weren't talking about the geopolitical implications in the sense you mean. I was talking about the Swedish and Finnish situation of joining Nato, how our perspective is on the matter and what our security would be against Russian aggression. — Christoffer
Maybe my social circle is just more educated than that and has more insight into things. — Christoffer
precisely the right time for Sweden and Finland to affirm their European identity. — magritte
Or just have other sources for the information than online ideological bloggers. — Christoffer
has constant social interactions with people living and working — Christoffer
Oh, you hadn't heard that arguments are geolocked? — Streetlight
if Russia dropped nuclear weapons on Finland and Sweden today or even the day after they join NATO, it still remains completely rational for the US, UK and France to not attack Russia with nuclear weapons, fearing a nuclear counter attack. — boethius
I find many cases in which alliances restrained the United States, or in which the United States restrained its allies or sidestepped costly commitments. I only examine U.S. military conflicts and therefore cannot evaluate fully the prevalence of such cases of peace, but even within my biased sample, there are at least four cases in which alliances prevented U.S. escalation, and another seven cases in which the United States reneged on security commitments and/or restrained an ally from attacking a third party.
I think you should shut the fuck up. You're not even on the same side of the globe so you have no idea what you're talking about. — Christoffer
looks like a sure win for Ukraine now.
So I think the outstanding question is whether Ukraine should push to retake the Donbass region or not. Is that going to be a long separatist war? Crimea seems a step too far — Benkei
So it's not so okay to condemn a defender. Maybe the distinction is not clear enough for you? — Olivier5
Because they didn't start the war and are already in the right frame of mind. They don't want an endless war. They want peace. — Olivier5
The problem then becomes the security and stability of Russia itself. This is why Macron and others are reminding us all that we need to keep channels of communication open with Russia, and to make sure Ukraine doesn't push its advantage beyond the liberation of Ukraine. A victorious Ukraine, armed to the teeth, could also become a destabilizing factor in the future. Zelenskyy won't be here forever. Wars often stroke extreme nationalism. — Olivier5
That is ridiculous. — Olivier5
The Russians are not defending themselves. They are attacking. There is no comparison. Ethically we must condemn such an aggression. — Olivier5
It would even out the negotiating positions of each, and ensure that the Russians get interested in making real concessions to secure peace. It'd put them in the right frame of mind. — Olivier5
I support the line of my own government so far. I have no major disagreement with the 'Macron doctrine'. — Olivier5
It is has to do with the Ukrainians being in a better position to judge what they ought to do than us. — Olivier5
durable peace cannot be created by fiat, and that the genuine desire of the belligerents is key. — Olivier5
It's not our place to tell the Ukrainians what they should do. — Olivier5
So what? — Olivier5
