Since the moment that our lives are limited we tend to see everything with limitations in terms of time, age, ability, understanding, etc...
It can affect us because it shows how weak we are towards universe.
For example: "A trip to Pluto takes 35 years of our life" it is literally a barrier of our capacities and nobody can pursue the trip yet. — javi2541997
Did they see these thoughts as forming a wall, a barrier? — Art48
US involvement in this war is beyond question. — Xtrix
When he withdraws his forces and the country is liberated or when that outcome becomes inevitable, obviously. — Baden
Can we agree that this is not what an effective defense of a country looks like? At what point does it become a failure to defend? 50% 60% 70% of the infrastructure, the population, what is it? — FreeEmotion
It's just another case of this childish notion thst we have to pass moral judgement on every fucking thing we say. — Isaac
Peace — Isaac
While you may be enjoying the spectacle, they are dying and their country is being destroyed. — Baden
So the Soufan centre are propagandists now? What evidence do you have for that accusation? — Isaac
The most likely outcome is still Russia forcing Ukraine to capitulate through conventional warfare. That might take a month or a year depending on how much support Ukraine gets, but they're losing the war simply because they're facing a much more powerful opponent — Baden
Your delusions are your own. — Xtrix
They’re still fighting this war by contributing support. They’re as involved as one can be. — Xtrix
But “they” don’t have the pull that Big Oil does. — Xtrix
It’s extremely good for business. Take a look at Lockheed stock since the beginning of the war — Xtrix
Another is the fossil fuel industry. They’ve been very happy indeed, now that they can present themselves as heroes. — Xtrix
There’s no way Ukraine lasts this long without military support, as you know. So yes, the US is also fighting this war. — Xtrix
That I'm angry is entirely a fantasy of yours, I — Isaac
What interests me here is why, given two reasonable views people could adopt, they choose the one which exculpates the West (mostly their own nations) and puts all agency on Russia (the one nation they have absolutely no say in, nor responsibility for). I find that choice suspicious in motive, but it's still one of the plausible options. — Isaac
n that respect, it seems the difference of opinion is over whether 'giving in' to Putin's bullying is going to cause more suffering long-term, or whether a long drawn-out war followed by crippling debt would.
But that's just exactly the contrast I've been pointing to for the last 200 pages. Apparently it makes me a Putin apologist, because it seems concern for the well-being of ordinary folk has to take second place to flag waiving for the 'goodies'. — Isaac
They have no interest in a negotiated settlement. This war is good for business, and so there's little chance the US will allow Putin any kind of path to save face. — Xtrix
What lesson do you derive from your 'historical context', pray tell?
— Olivier5
That the United States has a major role to play in this conflict, historically and currently -- and are, as usual, making things worse by rejecting peace negotiations. — Xtrix
I expected some level of moral understanding, some level of understanding of pragmatic hard choices, but this thread is just as bad as any Reddit thread on the subject. — Christoffer
But what we're being asked here to accept, by ssu, @SophistiCat, @Christoffer et al, is that all that just happened by chance, just dumb luck. — Isaac