Do you genuinely think that if Russia wouldn't have invaded Ukraine, Sweden and Finland would be joining NATO? Of course not! — ssu
Just think about what it means when Putin says that the collapse of the Soviet empire “was the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century”. Just stop for a moment and think what that means. Just think how Russia has approached other ex-Soviet states. — ssu
somehow, Russia is given this right to "naturally" be a bully as if it would have the right for a "sphere of influence". — ssu
... are we ... are we the peace mongers?
Agreed, although in Britain there was an acute case of the people who were treating the people in a brutal way were foreigners who invaded and they literally were above the law for hundreds of years. You see Boris Johnson literally believes he is morally above the law, the law is for the plebs. Eton college drums this mentality into their students, it’s morally corrupt.I think most politicians, and people with power and influence in general, see themselves above the law. Your "Norman" system doesn't really seem any worse than others.
Yes, in Britain though the architects of the hierarchy were these invaders. I see in the U.K. the unprivileged classes as traumatised following a thousand years of abuse. This trauma manifests in the hooliganism, base ignorance and populist politics. I doubt that if the Normans had lost in 1066 we would be like this.All or most systems have some form of social and economic hierarchy, including supposedly "egalitarian" ones like Marxism-Leninism.
That is irrelevant to the argument. Many of our ruling class were corrupt, decadent, self destructive. In a sense victims of the system they were born into.Yes, Churchill probably considered himself "upper-class"
Again, no argument here. Although I would put the emphasis on some positive and constructive aspects of this. Rather like what made Roman imperialism successful, Transatlanticism worked with those who they influenced, often made them more prosperous.America largely took over from Britain and continued the Anglo-Saxon or "Norman" imperialism by financial, economic, and military means. Organizations like NATO and the EU are manifestations of US imperialism a.k.a. Atlanticism or Transatlanticism.
Ha! No, unfortunately not. Apparently advocating any strategy other than throwing more Ukrainians under Putin's tanks so we can gloat when he loses, is literally working for the FSB. I've been assured that this is "nuance" (↪Christoffer ). — Isaac
The point you never fucking understand is that Ukrainians fight for their survival as an independent state and the world support that defense and will to exist. — Christoffer
You advocate for them to surrender to a dictator who wants to rule over them and pull all their freedoms under his power. — Christoffer
It only means that it's the best security we have against Russia. But you can't get that into your skull, because you can only draw thick lines in the sand, view everything as black and white. — Christoffer
You advocate for solutions that do not simply exist — Christoffer
if Ukraine surrendered and Russia came to power in Ukraine and it saved lives in the short run, what the fuck do you think life would be like in Ukraine after that? Especially after the torture, executions, and rapings of civilians by Russians. What do you think such life would be like going forward under the rule of Putin — Christoffer
The ONLY solution for Ukraine is to fight back and push Russia out of Ukraine. The ONLY solution for Ukraine is to build some guarantee of this kind of invasion never happen again. — Christoffer
you can only draw thick lines in the sand, view everything as black and white. — Christoffer
You advocate for solutions that do not simply exist or that blindly are about saving lives with total disregard for what the consequences of that would be. — Christoffer
the nuance I'm speaking about has to do with the pragmatic reality of all of this. — Christoffer
I advocate that they surrender to a dictator who wants to secure his regime against foreign interference (and is willing to use brutal force to do so). Again, your personal assessment of the situation is not a fact, its an opinion, one with which I, and many experts in the field, disagree. — Isaac
No. I advocate that they surrender to a dictator who wants to secure his regime against foreign interference (and is willing to use brutal force to do so). — Isaac
No. I can't get that into my skull because I disagree. Again, something many experts in the field also do. — Isaac
If you restrict solutions only to those which currently exist, how do you suppose society evolves? — Isaac
You're simply assuming a negotiated settlement would result in Putin having complete control over Ukraine. There's no ground for you to assume that's the only possible outcome. — Isaac
You see why it's difficult to take you seriously? Everything you think is black and white is assumed, without question, to be so, yet you accuse others of black-and-white thinking without even a hint of humility about the hypocrisy inherent there. — Isaac
A perfect summary. Do you actually know what 'nuance' means in this context? You're claiming the 'nuance' - the subtle and complex effects and implications that are not immediately apparent - is the simple, uncomplicated reality you see in front of you. — Isaac
In any situation in which experts disagree, laymen must, at the very least, agree that it is possible to rationally hold one of the viewpoints held by any of the disagreeing experts. — Isaac
In this case I think what Putin says and does is far more important than what you, me, or someone else. He made the decision to start this war.You keep reverting to this tactic. Putin said that he was invading Ukraine to rid it of Nazis. We can point to all sorts of things Putin said. If you're just going to assume the ones that support your narrative are true and the ones which oppose it are lies then obviously your narrative is going to come out looking well supported. — Isaac
And this kind of behavior, which you aptly describe, is the reason why countries have opted to join NATO. The fears that the Baltic States or Poland has had about Russia have shown to be true, unfortunately. Many didn't think it would be so.Choosing devastating war over diplomacy (even including concessions) is not the 'noble' choice. It's just fucking psychopathic. A sane nation does not escalate every conflict to full blown war just to 'teach them a lesson'. We hope that mature nations don't act like parents from a 1950s soap opera. — Isaac
Ahh, that’s alright then. Let’s just go back to the history written by the victors then. Nothing to see hear.We call it: "the Special Military Operation in the North".
The lack of insight or understanding of the consequences of this statement is remarkable. — Christoffer
Experts of your choice, — Christoffer
cherry-picked ones from fringe departments — Christoffer
who naively disregard any kind of consequential analysis of the fallout from the atrocities Russia commits or what Ukraine would face under the rule of Putin. — Christoffer
You are assuming that you can trust Putin. Doesn't the constant broken promises from Russia during this war kind of inform you that they're not trustworthy to follow through on any kind of negotiation? — Christoffer
you think any kind of negotiation will result in anything other than Putin and Russia doing whatever the fuck they want. — Christoffer
Are you able to spot the difference between a literal two-sided issue and issues that are nuanced? — Christoffer
The Ukrainians don't want this, so maybe you should fucking listen to what the Ukrainians actually want and stop speaking for them. — Christoffer
Maybe you should go and watch the mutilated bodies of civilians and children in Ukraine — Christoffer
Or just go with the consensus. — Christoffer
it's also possible if you are actually educated yourself to analyze and philosophize from the facts and reports that exist openly — Christoffer
In this case I think what Putin says and does is far more important than what you, me, or someone else. — ssu
Well, if a statement is "more articulated" that doesn't make it more logical, comprehensible, or true, does it? — Apollodorus
You're claiming that my "propaganda is instrumental to Russian criminal expansionism”. But you have completely failed to demonstrate (a) that my statements were "propaganda" and (b) that they have any impact on Russia's foreign policy. — Apollodorus
Moreover, I never said I was "against Western involvement in Ukraine", so there really is no need for you to make things up. As far as I am concerned, Russia and the West can do in Ukraine whatever they want to. Let them fight it out and whoever is the best fighter deserves to win. Very simple and easy to understand IMO. — Apollodorus
Yes, I am against NATO and against the EU because I am against imperialism. But I think discussion forums are for people to exchange views without resorting to ad hominems and insults. — Apollodorus
Ukraine entering NATO may or may not be a nuclear threat to Russia. That's for Russia to decide, not for you or me. But the situation is much more complex than that. If Ukraine becomes a NATO member, it might try to push Russia out of Crimea. This would be unacceptable to Russia (a) because Crimea has never been Ukrainian, (b) because this would result in NATO control of the Black Sea which Russia needs for access to the Mediterranean, and (c) because Crimea has been the base of Russia's Black Sea fleet for centuries (from 1783, to be more precise): Black Sea Fleet - Wikipedia
So, I think an objective analysis of the situation needs to consider the concerns of both sides, not just one. — “Apollodorus
Anyway, if you think that "the US is preparing contingency scenarios with its allies", and is "not waiting", then there is nothing to worry about. — Apollodorus
So, I'm not sure who is more likely to use nuclear weapons. A country that has never done it, or one that has? — Apollodorus
No, the lack of agreeing with you is remarkable. again, unless you're claiming yourself to be infallible, then disagreeing with you is not the same as lacking understanding. — Isaac
So you didn't choose the experts you cite? Remarkable! who did choose them then? — Isaac
Which fringe departments would those be? — Isaac
Again, unless your claim is that you are infallible, people disagreeing with you about the fallout is not the same as then naively disregarding it. — Isaac
Yes. Successful negotiation does not rely on the lack of lies (thank God!) otherwise no negotiation would ever take place and the world would be at constant war. All politicians lie. — Isaac
Once more. Disagreeing with you about the difference is not the same as being unable to spot it, unless you are infallible. — Isaac
OK, so there are 41 million Ukrainians. By what means did you come to your conclusion about what they all want? Did you ask all of them? What about future Ukrainians, do they get considered, and if so, by whom? — Isaac
That would confirm that there was a brutal war going on. In what way would that confirm which was the best solution to stop it? — Isaac
Ah yes, the famous 'consensus'. How was it you measured this again? — Isaac
And why would you go with the consensus? Explain to me the mechanism by which a more popular idea is rendered more likely to be right. — Isaac
And you measure people's capacities in that respect how, exactly? Let me guess...is it the extent to which they agree with you? — Isaac
His intentions are obviously important. Likely he believes that the West has always been out to get Russia. And naturally that any opposition movement against his rule is machinated by the West and it's intelligence services.Because you've decided that some of the things he says are lies and some are true. Some things are irrelevant to his motives and some aren't. — Isaac
... are we ... are we the peace mongers? — boethius
I advocate that they surrender to a dictator who wants to secure his regime against foreign interference (and is willing to use brutal force to do so). — Isaac
In this case I think what Putin says and does is far more important than what you, me, or someone else. He made the decision to start this war. — ssu
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