Second step: are human rights better implemented within Western countries? Yes — neomac
This step does not support your argument. To do so it would have to be possible for all countries to be like western countries, but if the human rights in western countries are bought at the expense of human rights in chattel countries, then it is not. You’d have to demonstrate not only that human rights are better in western countries, but that western countries do not worsen human rights elsewhere in achieving that state. — Isaac
is Ukraine more pro-West than Russia? Yes. Asking to join NATO and EU, and be ready to suffer a war against Russia to defend their choice wrt anti-Western rhetoric and hostility from Russia are unquestionable evidences for that. And if this is no evidence I don’t know what is. — neomac
Seriously? A bit of pro-western rhetoric is the gold-standard evidence of a desire to adopt western human rights values?
The human rights record of Ukraine is on record for all to see. You can't bluff your way out of it. Read the reports. — Isaac
anti-West Russia with a poorer implementation of human rights — neomac
It does not have a poorer human rights record. Again, this is all on record. Read the reports. — Isaac
the democracy index is telling — neomac
Democracy is not exhaustive of human rights, not even close. It's one of 30 articles. Usually the one chosen by neoliberals like you to excuse nations for trampling over the other 29. — Isaac
Is this enough evidence? If not why not? — neomac
See above. What could possibly make you think that the satisfaction on one out of thirty articles of human rights would be all the evidence needed? — Isaac
Here is a summary for you: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_rights_in_Russia — neomac
Here is a summary for you: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_rights_in_Russia — neomac
John is taller than jack because John is 6 foot.
See any problem with that argument. — Isaac
Why would I need to put Ukraine? I was comparing Russia with the West (including ex-Soviet republic joining the West) not Russia with Ukraine, for the obvious reason that I expect that the Western integration process of Ukraine will improve its human rights conditions as it did with other ex-Soviet republics (indeed it's one of the condition of EU membership https://neighbourhood-enlargement.ec.europa.eu/enlargement-policy/conditions-membership_en). That's exactly the line of reasoning that you can't even follow on a step-by-step basis.Christ! You didn't even put Ukraine on the fucking chart (which if you had, would have put them next to Russia).
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/physical-integrity-rights-fkr?tab=chart&country=UKR~RUS
It's like arguing with children. — Isaac
So you think that was the first [...] — Isaac
Virtue signalling — Isaac
(spraying bombs, spreading destruction, letting their mercs run free, flattening towns, killing, shamming, re-enculturating, fear-mongering and calls for nationalism at home)
[...]
trajectory
[...]
ruthless oppressive regressive autocratic untrustworthy land-grabber
[...]
risky — Jan 23, 2023
Crimea — Isaac
(spraying bombs, spreading destruction, letting their mercs run free, flattening towns, killing, shamming, re-enculturating, fear-mongering and calls for nationalism at home)
[...]
trajectory
[...]
ruthless oppressive regressive autocratic untrustworthy land-grabber
[...]
risky — Jan 23, 2023
I'm not a newspaper — Isaac
I expect that the Western integration process of Ukraine will improve its human rights conditions as it did with other ex-Soviet republics (indeed it's one of the condition of EU membership https://neighbourhood-enlargement.ec.europa.eu/enlargement-policy/conditions-membership_en). That's exactly the line of reasoning that you can't even follow on a step-by-step basis.
But good you posted your chart, because it still neatly fits into my line of reasoning: Ukraine outside the Western influence, under Russian sphere of influence or in conflict with Russia, shows as poor human rights conditions as Russia wrt West. — neomac
You missed: — jorndoe
The wikipedia article was to make you appreciate the remarkable breath of evidences one can find about the poor status of human rights in Russia (especially under Putin). — neomac
Apparently neomac is capable of comparing two entities only by looking at data on one of them — Isaac
If we were to do a side by side comparison of human rights violations in the 21st century of the United States and Russia, I'm not sure who would come out on top, but my bet would be on the Americans taking the cake. — Tzeentch
We're all up in arms about supposed Russian torture of Ukrainian POWs (which if true is horrible and inexcusable, don't get me wrong), but have we already forgotten Guantanamo? — Tzeentch
The rest of Western countries (including ex-Soviet republics) are much better than the US, Ukraine and Russia. — neomac
So because western countries have better human rights records than Russia, it's morally legitimate to support Ukraine's fight over territory?
If Ukraine would then join the west's approach, and if the west's human rights are not simply bought at the expense of others (1), and if the utter destruction of Ukraine's economy and the flooding of its black markets with weapons aren't enough to tip it back over into nationalist extremism (2)… then you might, just might, get an improvement in human rights.
And this slim chance is worth the deaths of tens of thousands? (3) — Isaac
Tell me. Those other ex-soviet countries which came under western influence, did we fight a proxy war with Russia over each of them? Or did economic development, local political action and covert support bring that about? — Isaac
So in what way is fighting a long protracted proxy war with Russia necessary for this vague and speculative end goal of yours? — Isaac
As compassionate outsiders, our concern should solely be for the well-being of the people there. — Isaac
That’s what inspired the first step of my line of reasoning, namely "human rights is an acceptable way to identify collective well-being? Yes”, as a good starting point (not because I find it self-evident).What is the well-being of the people? — neomac
That's up to us to decide. Personally I think the notion of human rights is a good starting point. — Isaac
And you're using physical integrity rights as a proxy for human rights because…? — Isaac
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/physical-integrity-rights-fkr?tab=chart&country=HRV~BLR~IRQ~RUS~SAU~UKR~USA
1. Note Croatia, the most recent accession to the EU, whose record has gone down since joining.
2. Note Belarus, undoubtedly a Russian puppet state whose score is higher than the US.
3. Note Saudi Arabia, an ally of the US performing identically to Russia.
4. Note Iraq, a famous beneficiary of the US's military help, at the bottom of the list below everyone.
Even with your own cherry-picked proxy for human rights (which are so much more than just democracy and government freedoms), your argument falls flat on its face. — Isaac
As compassionate outsiders, our concern should solely be for the well-being of the people there. — Isaac
That’s what inspired the first step of my line of reasoning, namely "human rights is an acceptable way to identify collective well-being? Yes”, as a good starting point (not because I find it as a self-evident, or the only possible, or the best starting point).What is the well-being of the people? — neomac
That's up to us to decide. Personally I think the notion of human rights is a good starting point. — Isaac
Here's it's chart that it achieved all on its own first ...
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/physical-integrity-rights-fkr?tab=chart&time=earliest..2004&country=~LTU
Notice the difference? In 2004 Lithuania joined the EU and NATO. That move ended all progress in your chosen metric of human rights. — Isaac
And this latter I would agree, as Ukraine had elections (which changed the power structure) not only in 2014, but afterwards which change the political landscape a lot.Foreign NGOs and IGOs did indeed provide some small levels of support to several independent news groups, and SMOs in 2013, but this was clearly ad hoc and recipient actioned. Moreover, as was explained by one Kyiv based embassy worker, most foreign actors, be they diplomats or NGOs focused on elite actors and attempted to help broker a deal (author’s correspondence February 14, 2014, NYC). Ukrainian political insiders, have informally also complained about the lack of initial interest and then later mismanagement of the EuroMaidan crisis specifically by leaders of the EU (and EU member states) and the United States. Thus it is difficult to discern the real influence these actors had on the mobilization process.
It is possible, as I have argued elsewhere, that our focus on foreign actors oftentimes over-exaggerates not only their role in the mobilization process, but also their ability to influence actors and events.
Not something planned and controlled from other countries, ... — ssu
The coup speculators... — Paine
I just hope it's simple ignorance about the actual history. — ssu
this transcript suggests that the US has very clear ideas about what the outcome should be and is striving to achieve these goals...Washington clearly has its own game-plan — https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-26079957
it truly was the most blatant coup in history. — George Friedman, director of Stratfor
Since the violence wielded by the Yanukovych regime was a decisive factor in the growth of the revolution, your planners would have had to have been behind that as well. Pretty crafty. — Paine
if they support my claims, that’s good — neomac
It seems that some modicum of the burden of proof here should be on those claiming the change was caused by the U.S. instead of developments in Ukrainian society in relation to Russian influence. How was that manipulation actually carried out? — Paine
Otherwise, the notion is as vague and binary as the theory on Color Revolutions developed by the Kremlin ... — Paine
Exactly and well put.There is no secret about the pursuit of U.S. interests and their intention to support ties to the E.U.
This influx of support does not show that the revolution was engineered by outsiders.
Since the violence wielded by the Yanukovych regime was a decisive factor in the growth of the revolution, your planners would have had to have been behind that as well. Pretty crafty. — Paine
Indeed. That is why I referred to a famous example to contrast the difference of conditions in Chile and Ukraine.The cases of the US staging coups are more than I care to count. — Tzeentch
It seems that some modicum of the burden of proof here should be on those claiming the change was caused by the U.S — Paine
Don't put words in my mouth. What I'm against is the reurgitation of Russian propaganda and to say that the US staged the Revolution of Dignity, not that it (the US) tried to influence Ukrainian actors (and those actors trying to get help from the US)when the protests were already under way, but that the US literally staged a coup.↪ssu scarcely acknowledged the possibility of US involvement. — Tzeentch
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.