And if so - what seems to be the issue, exactly? — Streetlight
Consider Putin's involvement in America's 2016 election — Metaphysician Undercover
We're good friends, remember? — Streetlight
'Epistemically fallacious'? What could that possibly mean in the context of persuasion. — Isaac
Interested now in what an epistemically non-fallacious method of persuasion might be — Isaac
So epistemically non-fallacious? Or not? — Isaac
No. That is why they may. You've yet to demonstrate that they do. — Isaac
arguably — neomac
Go on then... — Isaac
it's OK that Ukrainians should drop dead on the West's behalf. — Streetlight
Westerners decided to support them for Western plausible security concerns too, of course. — neomac
(on how Putin can kill whoever he wants to, wherever they are) — Olivier5
30% information, 70% sarcasm and insults. — Xtrix
I'm not wading though these pages of muck to repost all the times you have played Nazi PR specialist, but you are welcome to search my posts for when I have called you out on it. Although probably don't bother as you wouldn't be able to read them correctly anyway. — Streetlight
And if so - what seems to be the issue, exactly? — Streetlight
Logic, mathematics, scientific empirical methods — neomac
...journalistic methods... — neomac
administrative/institutional methods — neomac
common sense — neomac
Well that depends on the reasons why one would opt for violence in the given circumstances. — neomac
the ratio of increasing the military, economic, and human costs of the Russian aggression for the Russians is in deterring them (an other powers challenging the current World Order) from pursing aggressively their imperialistic ambitions, and this makes perfect sense in strategic terms given certain plausible assumptions (including the available evidence like Putin's political declarations against the West + all his nuclear, energy, alimentary threats, his wars on the Russian border, his attempts to build an international front competing against Western hegemony, Russian military and pro-active presence in the Middle East and in Africa, Russian cyber-war against Western institutions, Putin's ruthless determination in pursuing this war at all costs after the annexation of Crimea which great strategic value from a military point of view, his huge concentration of political power, all hyper-nationalist and extremist people in his national TV and entourage with their revanchist rhetoric, etc.), of course. — neomac
I don't have the information to agree with it because it really depends on what it costs us, or more specifically, what it costs Ukrainians, to "increase the human, financial and military cost of this war for Moscow". — Benkei
I think Biden is doing what he can. He needs to avoid escalation. — Olivier5
The United States is providing Ukraine with high mobility artillery rocket systems that can accurately hit targets as far away as 80 km (50 miles) after Ukraine gave "assurances" they will not use the missiles to strike inside Russia, senior administration officials said.
Nice phrase. In other words, crank up the pressure on Moscow while avoiding WW3. I still think Biden is doing fine. His military establishment is as we know ultra-awkish. He has to proceed with a degree of caution and temper their enthusiasm.escalate by stealth — Apollodorus
In other words, crank up the pressure on Moscow while avoiding WW3. — Olivier5
it is neither naïve nor immoral nor unphilosophical to support a democracy that is being attacked by a dictatorship. — Olivier5
Biden did say "For God's sake, this man [Putin] cannot remain in power". — Apollodorus
you have expressly stated that considering Russia's case would be "unprincipled". — Apollodorus
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