So show me a post where you gave a source after I requested it. Otherwise disinformation. — apokrisis
Great. You will have no problem providing expert sources arguing the opposite then. Look forward to it. — apokrisis
I've provided plenty of sources throughout my contributions, but on this particular issue (the motivation behind Russian foreign policy) there's academics like Daniel Treisman, experts such as Fyodor Lukyanov, Andrei Tsygankov, Richard Sawka, Marie Mendras... — Isaac
Even if it is opinion, I prefer it from someone with a name and credible credentials. — apokrisis
I know they are more than some random dude on the internet. Even if it is opinion, I prefer it from someone with a name and credible credentials. — apokrisis
That makes absolutely zero sense on a debate forum.
Point here is to present analysis and then defend or reformulate it in light of critique and rebuttal. — boethius
I've provided plenty of sources throughout my contributions, but on this particular issue (the motivation behind Russian foreign policy) there's academics like Daniel Treisman, experts such as Fyodor Lukyanov, Andrei Tsygankov, Richard Sawka, Marie Mendras... — Isaac
But in subsequent years, this grievance came back in ever more elaborate forms. And now a new identity has burst through. Putin no longer accepts the compromises of the Soviet past. His recent words and actions suggest he has become a radical nationalist, out to reshape borders and forge a single people out of Russians, Belarusians and Ukrainians, despite the human costs of war.
Pre-1917 “historic Russia” included a range of territories beyond just Ukraine, some of which — like Kazakhstan, the Baltic states and Moldova — have ethnic Russian minorities. If Putin stays true to the convictions he embraced in his speech on Monday, the door he has opened may prove hard for the world to close.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/02/25/words-deeds-putin-shows-hes-rejecting-even-soviet-era-borders/
One side is merely claiming a position to be plausible, the other is claiming that no other position than theirs is plausible. — Isaac
But I have been reading Treisman on interesting issues like Russia’s information autocracy. — apokrisis
I asked for actual articles or clips that present the case you want to make. — apokrisis
You mean one side claims Kyiv was a feint, Russian forces have proved competent, Putin has strictly limited war aims. And the other side is meant to believe these implausible interpretations by unknown posters who can’t provide credible professional analysis to back up what they say. — apokrisis
People have suggested it is plausible. — Isaac
It is you who are making the claim of implausibility. You have yet to provide a shred of evidence to support such a claim. — Isaac
Might I dare suggest that is at least a plausible suggestion and thus join you in evading all calls for credible support for anything I might happen to say at any point in these proceedings — apokrisis
Which one do you think I have chosen? — apokrisis
The options have been narrowed by batting away some of crazier views however. — apokrisis
There needs to be dialogue. But how can dialogue be had when conditions are this dire? — Manuel
So I find it hard to explain how the catastrophic sabotage of both pipelines (it looks like they are gone for good) could benefit Russia. — SophistiCat
The decision to annex territories where you are set to lose substantial ground right after the annexation obviously isn't what Putin likely had in mind politically. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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.