so I must be a Kremlin propagandist? — Tzeentch
What are you expecting me to respond to that? — Tzeentch
You're supposed to consider it and respond to it, not diverge off to something else. — jorndoe
Unless you genuinely don't think such changes would do a thing. — jorndoe
(Name-calling and such is perhaps telling.) — jorndoe
, ...but you live within the sphere of influence of the Kremlin ... — Olivier5
By the way, the US/Saudi Arabia relations have also been criticized by people all over (including in the US). From memory, I think Trump of all people called it out. (Maybe I'll post some sort of critique of my own here on the forum. Let me give it a think.)
I don't think my opinions on what changes to Russia would turn it into a more preferable state are in any way relevant to the question of Ukraine, and how it could have been avoided. — Tzeentch
You are referring to yourself that called me a Kremlin propagandist, I assume? — Tzeentch
My understanding (misunderstanding?) of Tolstoy is that he would say that the ultimate causes of these events are beyond mankind's comprehension - and that they are inevitable. But what do I know. — EricH
Would it have been possible to avoid the ongoing horror in Ukraine? If Ukraine had yielded some territory and agreed not to join NATO - would that have led to a long term peace? Or would that have only been a temporary stopgap measure and eventually Russia would have invaded anyway? I don't know - and no one else in this forum can answer that question with any certainty. It's possible that even Putin himself could not answer that question. It's all too depressing. — EricH
Would it have been possible to avoid the ongoing horror in Ukraine? If Ukraine had yielded some territory and agreed not to join NATO - would that have led to a long term peace? — EricH
relatives of the convicts told Important Stories that they began to recruit prisoners from the St Petersburg colonies to travel to the Donbass as part of the Wagner PMC
After that, about 50 convicts were taken from colonies No 6 and No 7 to the Rostov region, the publication wrote, citing sources — gulagu.net: prisoners with “combat experience” were taken out of colonies in the Nizhny Novgorod region and Mordovia (Jul 8, 2022)
The end of the "inglorious stupid clown" who is responsible for tens of thousands of lives in this senseless conflict in Ukraine. — Oleg Deripaska (Jul 7, 2022)
The clown is going. He is one of the main ideologues of the war against Russia until the last Ukrainian. — Vyacheslav Volodin (Jul 7, 2022)
Do not seek to destroy Russia. Russia cannot be destroyed. You can break your teeth on it - and then choke on them. — Maria Zakharova (Jul 7, 2022)
the logical result of British arrogance — Dmitry Medvedev (Jul 8, 2022)
Kazakhstan is apparently taking an opportunity to sneak off?
Kazakhstan withdraws from CIS agreement on currency committee – UNIAN (Jul 10, 2022) — jorndoe
End of the bromance: why Xi is wary of going to Moscow (Jul 7, 2022) — jorndoe
Chechen parliament speaker Magomed Daudov says that first and foremost, Chechen battalions in Ukraine are fighting a jihad to defend Islam. — jorndoe
I agree. Putin could stop any time he wants to. He continues because it's benefitting him. — Tate
Regretting the immorality of humankind is one activity. Trying to understand the world is another. — Tate
Sometimes justice is just unavailable. You don't give up on justice because of that, though. You keep struggling, because it might become feasible tomorrow. — Tate
The best moral choice is whatever the "most feasible" option is. From a moral point of view, it does not matter how probable the most feasible way to achieve the best moral objectives are, only that other choices are worse. — boethius
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.