FAUX News is a lie machine, a dumbing-down machine. Watching them will make you stupid. — Olivier5
Is the Russian Military Operation in Quagmire or Going According to Plan? — Sputnik
What is the end effect going to be on the Russian economy of almost all Western companies either pulling out of Russia or refusing to do business in Russia?
As many of our listeners are aware, our sister outlet, RT, was shut down permanently last week. This was largely a result of both domestic and international governmental pressure. RT also shut down in every European Union country, and lost its license in the UK. Here in the US, Congress was looking at ways to cut off Russian news, and was exploring a shutdown of RT and Sputnik. — Sputnik
I think "Social media companies have removed pro-Russian accounts which they claim are fake" is about the surest ground we have on that particular story.
Thank you for linking the Greenwald article.
— FreeEmotion — Isaac
Everyone watching this week-long mauling of dissenters understood the messaging and incentives: either get on board or stay silent lest you be similarly vilified. And that, in turn, meant there were fewer and fewer people willing to publicly question prevailing narratives, which made it in turn far more difficult for anyone else to separate themselves from unified group-think. — Greenwald
Essentially, as best I can see the narrative in the chatter: — Count Timothy von Icarus
↪FreeEmotion
I agree with ↪Olivier5 here. You do need to track your sources back a little further
https://www.npr.org/2022/02/28/1083401220/facebook-uncovers-disinformation-and-hacking-campaigns-targeting-ukraine?t=1646811637713
Unless we're going to start speculating about deep conspiracies, those accounts were fakes and so deserved to be taken down. There's enough real information. We don't need to fake it.
You could, for example, try this, from an award-winning investigative journalist
https://greenwald.substack.com/p/war-propaganda-about-ukraine-becoming?s=r — Isaac
How do you continue to fight when you are defeated? Ukraine isn't defeated yet. — Christoffer
Fox News controversies have included, among others, practicing biased reporting in favor of the Republican Party, its politicians, and conservative causes,[19][20][21] while portraying the Democratic Party in a negative light. — Wikipedia, Fox News
Fox News controversies have included, among others, practicing biased reporting in favor of the Republican Party, its politicians, and conservative causes,[19][20][21] while portraying the Democratic Party in a negative light. — Wikipedia
These concepts speak to Russia’s strategic formulation that it is in a state of perpetual conflict with its perceived adversaries. — U.S. Department of State
Analysis of what? I asked if you were willing to accept that an authoritarian regime took over your nation and you accepting that without a fight. — Christoffer
The sixty remaining French divisions and the two British divisions in France made a determined stand on the Somme and Aisne but were defeated by the German combination of air superiority and armoured mobility. German armies outflanked the intact Maginot Line and pushed deep into France, occupying Paris unopposed on 14 June. After the flight of the French government and the collapse of the French Army, German commanders met with French officials on 18 June to negotiate an end to hostilities.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_France — Wikipedia
It's not about whether they're forced. It's against international law to have combatants who are not clearly uniformed or otherwise identifiable as military targets — Isaac
Yep. So many ways this could have been avoided, all the way from Russian appeasement one one side of the spectrum to bulwarking Ukraine on the other. It's hard to see anything other than malfeasance. Even with gross incompetence you'd expect some of their actions to have gone in Ukraine's favour. — Isaac
However, there is a way to stop Putin’s Ukrainian adventure that has nothing to do with military intervention. That is to go after his money. — TIME
As we look at the menu of policy options being discussed by the Biden Administration in response to Putin’s manufactured Ukraine crisis, many are either too indirect or too harsh. Some, such as broad sanctions, would result in a lot of unnecessary hardships for ordinary Russians, who are victimized by Putin as much anyone else. — TIME
We cannot stay idle and passively observe these developments … For our country, it is a matter of life and death, a matter of our historical future as a nation … (Putin Speech Feb. 24 2022).
She said that she's not sure whether sending guns is better, even if it could be, but she knows for sure giving people a roof is always good. Can't believe she's only six at times!
— Benkei
Always good to know as a parent that you can't have gone too far wrong when they come out with stuff like that. — Isaac
Child is born with a heart of gold
The way of the world makes his heart so cold — Earth, Wind and Fire
It's pretty clear what the Russians believed going into Ukraine. It wasn't some neo-nazi groups, there weren't some "small groups of nazis somewhere", it was blatant propaganda of painting the entire nation as a Nazi regime, with the top leaders and Zelinskyy as being Nazis and them conducting genocide on the civilian population. — Christoffer
This has already been responded to, what's you're rebuttal?
— boethius
No, it has not. It hasn't even been understood yet. — Christoffer
He's not a mad tyrant. His weakness might be that he has only a small group of yes-men that surround him and nobody of them wants to say how stupid or disastrous an invasion of Ukraine would be. — ssu
☐ Prominent Russians join protests against Ukraine war amid 1,800 arrests (Feb 25, 2022)
☐ A few members of the Russian Parliament speak out against the war. (Feb 28, 2022)
☐ Ukraine: Russian opposition to the invasion is giving Putin cause for alarm (Mar 4, 2022)
☐ More than 4,300 people arrested at anti-war protests across Russia (Mar 6, 2022)
Individuals crossed off the list:
☑ Alexander Litvinenko (Nov 23, 2006), and then more testing was implemented at airports
☑ Here’s a list of Putin critics who've ended up dead (Mar 11, 2016)
Some crossed off the list a while back:
☑ Putin pulls plug on last critical TV channel (Jun 23, 2003)
☑ Russia's Last Independent TV Station Broadcasts 'Swan Lake' in Nod to History Before Going Dark (Mar 4, 2022) — jorndoe
Alexander Valterovich Litvinenko[a] (30 August 1962[2] or 4 December 1962[3] – 23 November 2006) was a British-naturalised Russian defector and former officer of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) who specialised in tackling organized crime.
In November 1998, Litvinenko and several other FSB officers publicly accused their superiors of ordering the assassination of the Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky. Litvinenko was arrested the following March on charges of exceeding the authority of his position. He was acquitted in November 1999 but re-arrested before the charges were again dismissed in 2000. He fled with his family to London and was granted asylum in the United Kingdom, where he worked as a journalist, writer and consultant for the British intelligence services. — Wikipedia
"]The Washington DC medical examiner's office has just confirmed that former Russian press minister Mikhail Lesin died of "blunt force trauma to the head."
Lesin, who founded the English-language television network Russia Today (RT) was found dead in a Washington, DC, hotel room in November 2015. — Business Insider
.The Daily Beast reports that before his death, Lesin was considering making a deal with the FBI to protect himself from corruption charges — Wikipedia
Definition of justification
1
a: the act or an instance of justifying something : VINDICATION
arguments offered in justification of their choice
b: an acceptable reason for doing something : something that justifies an act or way of behaving
could provide no justification for his decision — Merriam-Webster Dictionary
Bear in mind this is a Mercator projection. — Changeling
Perhaps he will take a more logical approach. He will focus on securing the gas fields in the east and a smaller area around his new "republics," declare victory, and end the war. — Count Timothy von Icarus
One of the delegates, Nabil Shaath, who was Palestinian foreign minister at the time, said: "President Bush said to all of us: 'I am driven with a mission from God'. God would tell me, 'George go and fight these terrorists in Afghanistan'. And I did. And then God would tell me 'George, go and end the tyranny in Iraq'. And I did." — George Bush: 'God told me to end the tyranny in Iraq'
Bush calls Saddam 'the guy who tried to kill my dad'
And, in discussing the threat posed by Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, Bush said: "After all, this is the guy who tried to kill my dad." — CNN
A Personal Vendetta?
Some Americans have wondered whether the president's determination to take on Saddam is a personal obsession — one born in the aftermath of the Gulf War his father launched, when Saddam was left in power. — ABC news
“Sacred values are an important component of being a human in a community. Many of the individuals who are leaving the comforts of an American or European life to go and join a group like ISIS are seeking a communal identity that promises purpose and social meaning,” Lopez said. “These are very basic desires that we can understand and that help to explain radicalization.”
The psychological drive for revenge is another example of an ancestral human adaptation with an evolutionary impact, Lopez said. Research in neuroscience shows that the prospect of inflicting retaliatory punishment triggers pleasure centers in the brain.
Indeed, the desire for revenge has led to some of human history’s most infamous wars.
“Hitler’s rise to power is a well-known example of the ability of revenge to compel large-scale violence. And the very foundations of American identity have been shaped by its public reaction to various events, such as the surprise attack on Pearl harbor and the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001,” Lopez said. — WSU political scientist Anthony Lopez
I would certainly agree Trump doesn't care much whether thugs supporting him are neo-Nazi's or just run-of-the-mill republicans, but it's a big stretch to say Trump is therefore a neo-Nazi or then neo-Nazi's had considerable influence in American governance. — boethius
Yes. It's the only way to give Putin what they think he deserves. War against Russia, whether clandestine or overt, appears to be inevitable. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem that I see, is that these sanctions are going to f### up MANY countries that have nothing to do with the war and are leaving less room for Russia to negotiate without them having to rely on nukes. That’s my worry. — Manuel
“We satisfy our endless needs and justify our bloody deeds in the name of destiny and in the name of God.” — Eagles
Logical fact is that Russia would be a dominant European player if 1) it wouldn't be hostile to it's neighbors and have imperialist aspirations and 2) had understood that it has to get it's economy competitive and better and that it's best resource is an well educated population. — ssu
Same response as above..losing a potential trade partner is not a cause for military action (takeover of another country!). Misplaced blame. — schopenhauer1
Correct. I for one am pretty sure that America and its British Poodle are planning a war against Russia, first by arming Ukraine and neighboring NATO countries and then manufacturing a pretext to intervene. — Apollodorus
That you attack some other country for hypothetical, possible attacks isn't legitimate. And when the neighbor has no intention to attack, no ability to pose a threat to you, then whose cause the war is should be obvious. — ssu
ran for president with massive media backing, and was elected president .... :grin: — Apollodorus
And where then do you yourself draw the line where countries "pose a threat" to Russia and are the ones where Russia is justified to use military force — ssu
Above all, Russia has already demanded NATO forces to withdraw from all Eastern member countries and that the US and Western members cannot hold any exercises in Poland, Romania, the Baltic States etc. That is their demand. So that's were the appeasement policy and "understanding Russia's legitimate security needs" will go in the end.
Perhaps you just should demolish NATO, because Russia feels threatened about it. — ssu
Or think about it this way: if Russia would promise to withdraw from Ukraine, promise to give back the Donbass and Crimea and stick to the Budapest memorandum and only thing Ukraine had to do is promise that it never, never joins NATO and remains neutral, you think Zelenskyi wouldn't take that offer? I'm sure he would. I think that even NATO would go with that sighing a relief. Do you genuinely think that Putin would give that kind of proposal? Of course not!
To think the Russian attack was a) only to halt NATO expansion or that b) Ukraine posed a threat to Russia is simply stupidity of believing the lies of Vladimir Putin. And that is foolish and basically dangerous. — ssu
First of all, NATO didn't attack Iraq, it wasn't an NATO operation. NATO countries belonged to the alliance, but so did Pakistan, Morocco, Egypt and even Hafez Assad's Syria. — ssu
Had the Gulf War not happened, it's likely that Saddam Hussein would have obtained a nuclear deterrence (even if the Israelis hit the Osirak reactor earlier). But the Gulf War, the later weapons inspections and Operation Desert Fox destroyed it — ssu
And thus the drumming for war, talks of the "Mushroom Cloud" after 2001 by Bush were propaganda concocted in the White House.[/quote
I will take your word for it, I am not sure of those facts, how much was concocted.
— ssu
Sorry, but I draw the line to justifiable defense to when a country is actually invaded. Not to attacking other countries because of vague hypotheticals. Pre-emption is still an attack, and then the war preparations ought to be evident to have any justifiable credibility (which is usually difficult). What kind of a threat Ukraine posed to the country with the largest nuclear weapons arsenal? Just answer that yourself. — ssu
If you accept that Russia has the right to attack Ukraine, then to be logical you should accept that then the US had the right to invade Iraq, because of the "potential", basically hypothetical threat that it posed. But that isn't even the real reason why Putin attacked Ukraine: he wants to control Ukraine and already has taken chunks of it. It's simply classic imperialism. — ssu
Furthermore, Ukraine is rich in natural resources, particularly in mineral deposits. It possesses the world’s largest reserves of commercial-grade iron ore—30 billion tonnes of ore or around one-fifth of the global total. It’s also worth noting that Ukraine ranks second in terms of known natural gas reserves in Europe, which today remain largely untapped. — Visuals
The same thing is happening in Ukraine. "The Russian advance has stalled"; "the Russians will soon control Black Sea ports and shipping"; "Ukrainian regular troops and volunteers are fighting very effectively"; "the Ukrainians are likely to win"; "the Ukrainians are likely to lose"; and so on and so forth. — Bitter Crank
Europe gains nothing, loses a lot, and it's failure to do anything meaningful to have peace, is because European elites do not care much about European interest, neither Ukrainians nor their own populations; they care about US interests, for reason I honestly don't get (I talked years ago with bureaucrats in Brussels about there being no purpose or benefit to antagonizing Russia for no discernible reason; they honestly didn't get my point of view, would just repeat USA talking points about the issue). — boethius
Putin is against Ukraine joining NATO because he believes that Ukraine might use military forces against Russia to reclaim the Crimean Peninsula, which Russia seized from Ukraine in 2014, or to reclaim parts in eastern Ukraine that are controlled by Russian-backed separatists.
“Imagine that Ukraine becomes a NATO member and launches those military operations.” Should we fight NATO then? Has anyone thought about it?” Putin said during a press conference at the Kremlin with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. — One World News