to now pour them into the largest concentration of Nazis in Europe? My God its horrifying. — Streetlight
What I said, originally, is that it is neither naïve nor immoral nor unphilosophical to support a democracy that is being attacked by a dictatorship. On the contrary, it is the natural, logical, and moral thing to do. — Olivier5
Yes. I'm aware of the agreement Bush Sr.(???) made after the fall of the Berlin wall to not expand NATO "one inch farther" to the east. Then, during the Clinton administration(I think???) that promise/agreement was broken. — creativesoul
Ain't that the truth? — Olivier5
Their lies and excuses are not worthy of consideration — Olivier5
Yes, and that's comforting. — Olivier5
I think the US has been quite decent in it's response. And what is notable that it has been a quite unified response from the West. — ssu
A British representative also mentions the existence of a “general agreement” that membership of NATO for eastern European countries is “unacceptable.” West German diplomat Juergen Hrobog said of the 1991 agreement: “We made it clear to the Soviet Union, in the 2+4 talks, as well as in other negotiations that we do not intend to benefit from the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Eastern Europe. NATO should not expand to the east, either officially or unofficially.” Hrobog further noted that West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl and Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher had agreed with this position as well.
What I said, originally, is that it is neither naïve nor immoral nor unphilosophical to support a democracy that is being attacked by a dictatorship. On the contrary, it is the natural, logical, and moral thing to do. — Olivier5
And then your sole support for that assertion was the people you've met in some African nations prefer democracy. — Isaac
How do you know something isn't worthy of consideration when you haven't considered it??? — Apollodorus
Don't forget that Saddam Hussein had even less rational thinking when he attacked Kuwait, his former ally, after a disastrous war against Iran. That the Soviet Union left Iraq on it's own and did OK the war against Iraq tells just how bad this idea was.3. The last clear example of aggression (that got condemned) was Iraq invading Kuwait with a much wider range of coalition partners than we see now. That could be political expediency, energy dependency, cynicism in light of the Western double standard or a more nuanced view than propagated in Western media about the underlying reasons why Russia attacked Ukraine. — Benkei
You misspelled "so that they can siphon tax money to arms dealers and turn Ukraine into a debt prison producing Nikes for the Western middle class while eliminating a competitor model of capitalism that does not play by the West's rules while letting Ukrainians drop dead for those goals, thanks to a war they precipitated and did everything to encourage and continue to prolong". — Streetlight
Anyone who thinks the US in particular has 'security concerns' half-way across the fucking planet is a clown. — Streetlight
To the degree that the Ukraine is crawling with Nazis who decisively tipped the course of events into war, then sure, I agree that the "Ukrainians are more pro-Western than anti-Western". Nazis being a uniquely Western apogee of civilization. — Streetlight
When the sovereignty and independence of a state is recognized, you recognize it's borders. But that's of course baseless for you.Your claims that Crimea belongs to Ukraine, that borders can’t be changed, that Russia recognized Ukraine’s independence in 1991, and Ukraine’s borders in 1994, etc., have been exposed as baseless. — Apollodorus
Russia’s annexation of Crimea is arguably legitimate — Apollodorus
Borders are NOT eternal. They change. If Russia changed the borders by “gifting” Crimea to Ukraine in 1954, it can change them again by annexing Crimea 60 years later! :smile: — Apollodorus
The prohibition of aggression suffers one exception: a war or a military operation can be approved by the UN security council (another cornerstone of the present world order). — Olivier5
These principles (that a UN charter signatory should not wage war on another; and that an aggressed signatory nation has a right to defending herself) are the cornerstone of our present world order. — Olivier5
Oh I have considered them and refuted them, for the most part. I or someone else here. I'm just not ready to dignify what I see as little more than "NATO caca" over and over again, during hundreds of pages, sorry. — Olivier5
A former military British fighter gives Channel 4 News a first hand account of life on the frontline in Ukraine after travelling to join the fight against the Russian invasion. He says disorganisation has led to the death of several British fighters already …
Though much of the world’s focus in the war has been on Russia’s disorganized and flawed campaign, Ukraine, too, is struggling. Ukraine’s army has suffered heavy losses, shown signs of disarray and, step by step, fallen back from some long-held areas in Donbas, the eastern region that is now the war’s epicenter.
To fill gaps in the frontline, Ukraine has resorted to deploying minimally trained volunteers of the Territorial Defense Force, which mobilized quickly as the war started. Hints of morale lapses have surfaced. One unit recorded a video protesting dire conditions. In interviews, soldiers said their artillery guns sometimes go quiet for lack of ammunition ….
Logic, mathematics, scientific empirical methods — neomac
Weird. What scientific studies have you read about Russia's invasion of Ukraine? Or weirder still mathematical ones? Did someone derive a new solution to quadratic equations which proves there are no Nazis in Ukraine? Does the theory that the US provoked Russia defy the law of the excluded middle?
...journalistic methods... — neomac
Do you mean phone hacking...?
administrative/institutional methods — neomac
...put the Kafka down.
common sense — neomac
Ah! Just when I'd finished playing cliche bingo and all, damn. I could have got "I arrived at my conclusions by Common Sense… — Isaac
Or not.
The point (the one you interjected about) is that your speculation here might work out, or it might not. You can't possibly say for sure. The empirical evidence is insufficient to choose between theories, there's been no scientific paper on it, no mathematician has compressed it into an irrefutable formula, it hasn't been rendered into truth tables... You just have to choose which to believe.
So why do you believe that one? — Isaac
When the sovereignty of a state is recognized, you recognize it's borders. — ssu
You even mix up Russia and Soviet Union, — ssu
Sounds like what you're advocating world government there. — Apollodorus
I don't recall anything that would qualify as "refutation". — Apollodorus
Was Nikita Khrushchev the leader of Russia or the leader of the Soviet Union (or more correctly the First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union)?How exactly do I "mix up Russia and Soviet Union"??? — Apollodorus
You have a problem with diplomacy? — Olivier5
Was Nikita Khrushchev the leader of Russia or the leader of the Soviet Union — ssu
"World government" is an extreme right trope. — Olivier5
You said it yourself. And the Soviet government isn't the Russian government.1. The transfer of Crimea to Ukraine was approved by the Soviet government and signed by the legal head of state, Klim Voroshilov. — Apollodorus
Interestingly just barely. In 1989 Russians indeed were the majority in the Soviet Union, but just with 50,8% being ethnically Russian. Likely afterwards ethnic Russians would have become the minority, if the Soviet Union had continued. Where you have population growth are in places like Uzbekistan, not in Russia.2. The Soviet Union was majority Russian — Apollodorus
But, as I said, its fun to see NATO Nazis trying to "think" .... :rofl: :rofl: :rofl: — Apollodorus
General Guidelines:
A respectful and moderate tone is desirable as it's the most likely to foster serious and productive discussion.
A respectful and moderate tone is desirable as it's the most likely to foster serious and productive discussion. — ssu
Many, however, felt that the UN, essentially a forum for discussion and coordination between sovereign governments, was insufficiently empowered for the task. A number of prominent persons, such as Albert Einstein, Winston Churchill, Bertrand Russell and Mahatma Gandhi, called on governments to proceed further by taking gradual steps towards forming an effectual federal world government ...
Westerners legitimately helped them due their security concerns and international commitments more than economic concerns. — neomac
That’s exactly why I talked about the Europeans. For the US, the “security concerns” must be understood wrt their hegemonic power, of course. — neomac
Apparently Ukrainians prefer to be Nazi than Russian, go figure how shitty it feels like to experience Russian hegemony — neomac
the country was called "Russia" as a general designation.
The Soviet Union was referred to as "Russia" in every-day language including in the press. — Apollodorus
Prior to any consideration of political regime, and the varied levels of freedom and security they afford to their citizens, to me the first and most important point here is that of aggression vs defence. — Olivier5
As if chopping your way out to some dumb remark you can smirk about, wasn’t even more weird. — neomac
The points I made for example are sufficient to rationally justify my perception of the Russian threat against the West — neomac
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.