So you don't understand what I wrote, even with that nice breakdown. — Christoffer
Or to just undermine the propaganda so that Russia's actions cannot be justified by them through lies. — Christoffer
What's there not to understand?
What strawman? — boethius
Russia claims independence for regions of Ukraine. The west releases intel of false flag operation. Russia releases "cry for help" from the independent regions, i.e false flag operation started. This validates the leaked intel of false flag operation. — Christoffer
Because you still retain that I view the intel as true and therefore... — Christoffer
There's also an inductive argument to be made. What's more likely based on what we know so far about this war? A) Russia continues to use propaganda and desinformation to try and control the narrative. B) The US has leaked intel continuously in order undermine that desinformation and has proven to be correct information based on Russia actually acting accordingly. — Christoffer
Russia also has the capacity to build the Death Star and also maybe sharks with lazers so be careful. — StreetlightX
As I said, the mere existence of that possibility as a motive cannot stand as evidence that it is, in fact, a motive on any given occasion. — Isaac
Let's see how my own personal intel plays out shall we? My network of sources tell me that Russia is likely to use weapons to attack Ukrainian positions. Let's just see over the next few hours if my intel leak proved true. Remember you heard it here first. — Isaac
But nothing has been proven otherwise — Christoffer
you're just doing circular reasoning based on your predetermined contempt of the west and the US. — Christoffer
It can also be as simple as these people actually wanting to fight against Russia since they are killing civilians and breaking international law. — Christoffer
This is called a straw man
[url=http://]having the impression of refuting an argument, whereas the real subject of the argument was not addressed or refuted, but instead replaced with a false one.[/url]
— Christoffer
joke (jōk)
n.
1. Something said or done to evoke laughter or amusement, especially an amusing story with a punch line.
2. A mischievous trick; a prank:
No, its called a joke... — Isaac
So when Russia forms a narrative around labs in Ukraine. And the west leaks intel once again that undermines that intel, i.e Russia might use chemical weapons. That will inform a plausible event chain based on previous events. It does not mean it will happen, it means it is likely it will happen according to these previous interplays. Nothing of this validates the current "leaked intel" as true, but the creating a likely scenario based on previous events. — Christoffer
If you do that in Russia you get sent to prison. It's not even comparable. — Christoffer
Are you still blaming Ukraine for this invasion? Like... you are unable to understand page after page of counter arguments to this? — Christoffer
Perversely, it’s the people most eager to consign the people of Ukraine to years, possibly decades, of this hell who will most loudly tell you how much their hearts bleed for them. — https://www.jacobinmag.com/2022/03/ukraine-afghanistan-quagmire-far-right-global-economy-climate-disaster
Does anyone here trust the US Governments official pronouncements or are these to be met with skepticism? — FreeEmotion
Does anyone here trust the US Governments official pronouncements or are these to be met with skepticism? — FreeEmotion
Bogolyubov and Kolomoisky fostered strong reputations as corporate raiders in the mid-2000s, becoming notorious for a series of hostile takeovers. Hostile takeovers Ukrainian style, that is, which often included the active involvement of Privat’s quasi-military teams. These schemes included, among others, a literal raid on the Kremenchuk steel plant in 2006, in which hundreds of hired rowdies armed with baseball bats, iron bars, gas and rubber bullet pistols and chainsaws forcibly took over the plant.
Privat Group has been involved in several court cases and arbitration proceedings in the US, UK, and Sweden. In 2009, a US court made clear its distrust of Privat representatives: “the Court has become increasingly skeptical of these gentleman [at Privat] and the credibility of their statements.”
In the aftermath of the 2014 Ukrainian revolution, Mr. Kolomoisky played a positive role for Ukraine in financing one of the largest and most effective paramilitary units fighting the Russian military intervention, at a time when the regular army was in shambles. Mr. Kolomoisky’s militia, Dnipro, held a section of the battle front west of the city of Donetsk.
Zelensky and his television production partners were beneficiaries of a web of offshore firms that allegedly received $41 million in funds from Kolomoisky’s Privatbank
Mr. Kolomoisky’s television station supported Mr. Zelensky in the 2019 presidential election … Mr. Zelensky’s spokeswoman published an article saying he plans to diminish the role of the oligarchs in Ukraine’s politics. But that is no simple matter. Mr. Kolomoisky controls a faction in Mr. Zelensky’s political party, the Servant of the People, without which the party would not have a majority in Parliament ….
This is why I'm hoping for a Russian revolution. Clearly, there are enough people in Russia who don't want the current form of government. — Christoffer
Zelensky has dug himself into a hole (or grave). My guess is that he was prompted by his oligarch masters (Kolomoisky & Co) to stand up to Russia in the hope that the US and UK, who have been arming and training his people, and maybe Israel, would come to his rescue. Obviously, he has miscalculated badly. Now he is likely to lose half of his country to Russia and he will have the death of thousands of Ukrainian civilians on his conscience. — Apollodorus
And if you do it in the West you get attacked by the media and by the brainwashed mobs in the streets. — Apollodorus
Ukraine is to be blamed for not meeting Russia's demands to stay out of NATO and for putting its own population in danger. — Apollodorus
The thing is that when the Soviet Union collapsed, there wasn't a revolution. — ssu
As stated many times, Nato is not an offensive alliance, they do not attack unless being attacked. — Christoffer
The Clinton administration and NATO officials were accused of inflating the number of Kosovar Albanians killed by Serbs. The media watchdog group Accuracy in Media charged the alliance with distorting the situation in Kosovo and lying about the number of civilian deaths in order to justify US involvement in the conflict
Yes. IMO the best solution would be for Ukraine to be divided fairly between the two sister nations. — Apollodorus
Russia should take everything east of the Dnieper, and maybe half of Kiev, and Zelensky (or Kolomoisky) can keep the rest. — Apollodorus
It's really unclear to me how Zelensky could have sat down and rationally worked out such a plan. In addition, his US supporters were pretty open about the goal to arm an insurgency ... which takes as given losing the conventional battle. — boethius
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