But are Europeans here "the lapdogs" of the Empire? Some enthusiastically promote this view even in this thread, but it hasn't gone so easily with the US and it's allies. France is a good example of this. It has joined several of the wars that the US has fought, but not all. In not going along with the invasion of Iraq I remember the push from some angry Americans to change the name of "French Fries" to "Freedom Fries" and all the talk of "Old Europe".Yes. Charitably speaking, people are also tired of a unipolar world, something I can understand, and it's a new thing, not a feature in the 30's. It's not healthy that the US army be as large as what? the next 5 to 10 national armies put together? They are just too dominant. And hypocritical to high degree. That much I can concede. — Olivier5
Yet to know and understand Russian policy is absolutely necessary. Ignorance about it is a weakness. Understanding what Russia has now become under Putin and where Putin has lead the country is important.We have no say whatsoever over Russian policy so whinging about it is nothing but empty virtue signalling. — Isaac
Yes. And notice that both me and @Christoffer have talked about what our governments are doing about the situation. I've personally met some members of parliament, not actually of the parties that I have voted, but talking even to them has given me confidence that they do understand what is at stake. It's comfortable to know that the bickering crowd of different parties and their politicians can get together and act as a team if the situation calls for it.We do have both a say and a duty to hold our own governments to account. So doing so is not only useful but necessary. — Isaac
True.We discover what our governments, our allies, are doing wrong and hold them to account for it. — Isaac
Yet to know and understand Russian policy is absolutely necessary. Ignorance about it is a weakness. Understanding what Russia has now become under Putin and where Putin has lead the country is important. — ssu
We do have both a say and a duty to hold our own governments to account. So doing so is not only useful but necessary. — Isaac
Yes. And notice that both me and Christoffer have talked about what our governments are doing about the situation. — ssu
Other than NATO enlargement being this reason for Russia to attack Ukraine (and for many, the absolutely only important reason) or that the US gave support to Ukrainian protesters in 2014, what is the issue why a thread about Ukraine and the war in Ukraine has to be about the US?A quick summary of the last few hundred pages might be:
We say: "the US are terrible for doing X...
You say: "yes but Russia also does X..."
Or: "Russia does Y which is worse..."
As if we didn't know. As if our commenting on the US was because of a lack of data on who else does that too, or who was worse... — Isaac
I'm not sure if you understand you here.I've read you both being broadly supportive of it, particularly the moves in the direction of NATO. So all the more odd then that you seem so opposed to us criticising our governments without you having to constantly undermine the power of that complaint by pointing out how some other government has done the same, or worse. — Isaac
Other than NATO enlargement being this reason for Russia to attack Ukraine (and for many, the absolutely only important reason) or that the US gave support to Ukrainian protesters in 2014, what is the issue why a thread about Ukraine and the war in Ukraine has to be about the US? — ssu
If Russia does terrible things in Ukraine and this is a thread about Ukraine, what is wrong with then discussing this? — ssu
So your critical about your governments. Fine. But just what has it have to do with Ukraine? Focus should be on what is going to happen in Ukraine. — ssu
I think that in a thread about the war in Ukraine you should dare to talk about what is happening in Ukraine. Why are you so defensive about talking about Russia and what is has done in Ukraine?Is that not enough? They've been instrumental in causing the war, perpetuating the war, and lying about the war...and you're seriously attempting some faux surprise about what they're doing in a thread about the war? — Isaac
A thread about the war in Ukraine is about the war in Ukraine.As I said, it's futile virtue signalling which draws attention away from the malpractice of those powers which we both can and ought hold to account. — Isaac
But are Europeans here "the lapdogs" of the Empire? Some enthusiastically promote this view even in this thread, but it hasn't gone so easily with the US and it's allies. France is a good example of this. It has joined several of the wars that the US has fought, but not all. In not going along with the invasion of Iraq — ssu
I think that in a thread about the war in Ukraine you should dare to talk about what is happening in Ukraine. — ssu
If that is somehow futile virtue signalling for you, I guess it's you who needs therapy here. — ssu
It strikes me now that this sums up nicely the issues with your responses (and to an extent Olivier5 and the conversation I'm having with @neomac).
A quick summary of the last few hundred pages might be:
We say: "the US are terrible for doing X...
You say: "yes but Russia also does X..."
Or: "Russia does Y which is worse..." — Isaac
Most important part?The US, Europe and NATO are instrumental parts of what's happening in Ukraine. Not only that, but they're the parts toward which we bear some responsibility. That makes them not only part of what's happening, but the most important part. — Isaac
:up: :100:The exact opposite is happening. We are here to talk about Ukraine and you guys try to make it about your anti-american obsession. — Olivier5
Try be serious. — Olivier5
You'd argue that despite not being in Ukraine, Putin is responsible for the events there and integral to how any solution might work.
That's exactly the same argument by which discussion about the US, Europe and NATO is included. — Isaac
NATO have no troops fighting in Ukraine, the Russians do. This makes a big difference in terms of involvement and hence responsibility. — Olivier5
Indeed. I don't see anyone denying a difference in scale. You are attempting something much more categorical than that. — Isaac
Why does the difference in the scale of responsibility mean we can discuss one party ad infinitum but should never mention the other? — Isaac
There is a categorical difference here. Those countries fighting in the Ukraine war, vs those not fighting. Two different categories. — Olivier5
This makes a big difference in terms of involvement and hence responsibility. — Olivier5
You can mention whatever. — Olivier5
What are your reasons for thinking we ought not discuss the role of the US, Europe and NATO? — Isaac
You mistook me for someone who cares what you talk about very much. I don't. — Olivier5
What are your reasons for thinking we ought not discuss the role of the US, Europe and NATO? — Isaac
the real discussion is like this:
We say: "the Russians are terrible for doing X...
You say: "yes but the US also does X..."
Or: "The US does Y which is worse..."
Not vice versa... — Olivier5
We do have both a say and a duty to hold our own governments to account. So doing so is not only useful but necessary. — Isaac
We have no say whatsoever over Russian policy so whinging about it is nothing but empty virtue signalling. — Isaac
You presumably have an opinion on whether one ought to discuss the role of the US, Europe and NATO? You presumably have reasons for that opinion. I'm asking what they are. What I choose to do doesn't enter into it. — Isaac
. The part of the conversation I'm asking about is why you then say
"yes but Russia also does X..." — Isaac
The Nazis were definitely wrong. Im not so sure "We" are right. The world is not so black and white. — Merkwurdichliebe
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