Exactly. Hence, the Kremlin circle = serial liars (+ hypocrites). Dis/agree? — jorndoe
Whether you do or not, the Kremlin circle does, and employs that as a rationale for their wretched warring, which hence falls flat. Yes? No? — jorndoe
Ukraine has made some progress, where Russia has regressed. Agree or not? — jorndoe
Especially with long weaving comments, eh? — jorndoe
By the way,
↪boethius, the Kremlin gets their way, or it's the nuclear way...?
— Nov 9, 2023 — jorndoe
FYI, reportedly, Ukraine has become the most littered area on the planet — littered with Russian mines, bombs, trip wires and traps, grenades, explosives in kitchen gear and toys, ... — jorndoe
So, if you want to live in the real world — boethius
However, now Ukraine seems to be essentially a police state, political parties banned, critical media banned, lot's of disappearing and murdering by the police state. — boethius
If one wants to live in the real world, the last thing they should do is believe anything you write. — Echarmion
My own grandparents themselves had to flee western Ukraine to escape persecution, and it is tragic to see this cycle continue. If the country devolves into chaos and insurgency, Jews could once again be at risk from some of their fellow citizens. Not acknowledging this threat means that little is being done to guard against it. — Ukraine's Nazi problem is real, NBC
Really, you expect anyone to believe that you care one whit about peace, or lives? — Echarmion
From a moral standpoint I view states as being fundamentally flawed from the outset. — Tzeentch
.But my engagement in the discussion about the Ukraine war has never been moral in nature. Morality isn't even a useful lens through which to view the conduct of states, since they are not moral actors — Tzeentch
Ukraine has a right to defend itself from a standpoint of international law, which is something I would never deny.
You have to pay attention to what is said, not fill in the blanks with what you would like to believe "I meant". — Tzeentch
As for the rest, I believe Ukraine will achieve nothing by continuing to fight, except for a worse bargaining position and further destruction of Ukraine.
There's nothing 'pro-Russian' about that, even if it's not what cheerleaders want to hear.
Yes, I believe Russia most-likely achieved its primary objectives. Yes, I believe the Ukrainiain bargaining position has only deteriorated since the negotiations of March/April 2022.
And on the topic of trust; it's Ukraine who stands to lose most in this war, so trust or no trust, refusing negotiations will only deteriorate its position further. — Tzeentch
However, the evidence behind the above warning is strong enough for NBC to publish the story even in an environment of general denialism and white washing of the issue. — boethius
I even wrote to my country's leadership 3 years before the war started explaining that a lack of international leadership (for example rich countries narcissistically only focusing on themselves, and not creating a mobile medical battalion to bring relief to areas experiencing overcapacity) would lead directly to chaos and conflict, most notably in Eastern Europe.
Now imagine if the West also put resources into mobile hospitals during the pandemic to at least be sure to bring basic medical supplies to areas experience a peak.
Even if it wouldn't be all that successful, it's the kind of thing that would bring people together, symbolize our caring for each other. Of course, the danger of this concept is that it may have worked too well and there'd be no need to wait for vaccines.
My proposal was rejected and I was informed the pandemic was in the hands of the experts, not to worry my pretty little head basically.
Exactly the process I described took place.
Now you may argue my mobile hospital concept would not have prevented the war in Ukraine, but I also explained in my letter that the insular attitude, essentially ignoring international diplomacy, would also contribute to the same.
Again, experts are handling it.
But are they? Are they really? — boethius
From a moral standpoint I view states as being fundamentally flawed from the outset. — Tzeentch
Meaning? — neomac
Do you mean that “those were blocked by the US simply to save Washington's ego” and “how many thousands of lives and billions in damages is Washington's ego worth?” do not express moral evaluations? Neither “my perspective presupposes peaceful coexistence is (or "should be") the goal of nations. Sadly, many nations and certainly the U.S. are not driven by that goal”?
How about the conduct of Putin, Zelensky, Biden, Macron, Scholz, Boris Johnson? Can we assess their political choices morally since they are moral actors? How about “These people are unhinged. The Netanyahu regime has got to go. Can we get regime change in Israel, please?” ? Does it express a moral evaluation? — neomac
Here is what I got so far, about your beliefs: Ukraine has a right to defend itself from a standpoint of international law. But not right to defend itself from a standpoint of morality because… it is not a moral actor? — neomac
Now the question: Putin who is a moral actor (right?) can invade Ukraine and violate its right from a standpoint of international law because from a moral point of view Ukraine has no right to self-defence? — neomac
What you have conveniently removed from this presentation of your views is all your normative claims about what Ukrainian should have done, what the US/Europeans should do, and who is to blame. — neomac
Let’s do another test, if I claimed: “Russia should stop illegally occupying Ukraine. That's an action that it can and should undertake unilaterally.
They should stop illegally occupying Ukraine, and stop committing human rights violations, war crimes and crimes against humanity. As long as Russia is the occupier and refuses to carry out the relevant UN resolutions, RUSSIA IS THE PROBLEM”.
Would you agree with that? — neomac
I love the logic of invoking denialism while posting a bunch of articles to then turn around and claim the articles are thus evidence of a much worse problem. It's the kind of backwards logic common to self-professed "free thinkers". — Echarmion
This really just seems like more evidence that you are conceited about your own abilities, and that your incessant distortion and outright lies merely serve to protect your ego. — Echarmion
Lavrov said on Thursday that Moldova, an Eastern European country and former Soviet republic, is putting itself in harm's way in its desire to join the European Union.
You can't just throw in a "hence" to construct an argument. — boethius
it doesn't fall flat — boethius
I do not think Ukraine has made more progress than Russia on the freedom and equality scale — boethius
mainly micro-blog — boethius
nuclear blackmail obviously works — boethius
You're genuinely surprised by the result? — boethius
Can anyone semi-informed imagine who might replace Putin, and what policy changes would result? Or am I only dreaming? — unenlightened
Should the West be unable to deal with even one major military challenge, this will no doubt embolden other actors, and reduce sharply the ability of western, primarily the European, nations to affect international trends. — Echarmion
What is astounding to me is the apparent lack of awareness of the overall situation. This was visible early on with the failure to make a convincing case to India, apparently forgetting that India is on the verge of becoming a major power and would have to be treated as an equal partner.
Is this simply the primacy of economics having become to ingrained, so European leaders have trouble actively shaping a geopolitical policy? — Echarmion
Is this simply the primacy of economics having become to ingrained, so European leaders have trouble actively shaping a geopolitical policy? — Echarmion
There will be no diplomatic solution with Putin. He may not be irrational, as some claim, but he is obsessed. At the beginning of the offensive, we were quick to supply anti-tank missiles and air defense equipment, and today we are doing a lot for air defense. But there were also unfortunate delays. If we now stand on the sidelines and criticize the fact that Ukraine is not making enough progress, we have to keep in mind that we have our share in this. — Klaus Wittmann
I'm a classic liberal in the practical sense, and an anarchist in an idealist sense.
For me, states are a 'necessary evil' at their very best, and more often than not just 'evil’. — Tzeentch
My arguments vis-á-vis Ukraine are not moral in nature, and the idea that this war is primarily caused by neocon foreign policy is not moral either.
Sometimes the sheer disgust I feel towards some of the clowns that inhabit the spheres of international politics shines through. Sue me. — Tzeentch
Those aren't moral 'shoulds' though, and attributing blame isn't necessarily moral in nature either. These are questions of cause & effect, strategy, etc. — Tzeentch
States are abstractions and not moral actors, so they have no moral rights.
As I said, morality is simply not a useful lens through which to evaluate the behavior of states.
Note that in the case of the Israel discussion, Israel has no legal right to self-defense, which is why the discussion shifted to the question of whether it had a moral right.
And no, of course my belief is not that Putin has a moral right to invade Ukraine.
For the purpose of this discussion I've always supposed Ukraine had a legal right to self-defense and that Russia's invasion is illegal, and never claimed otherwise. The basis for that is international law, and not morality. — Tzeentch
Let’s do another test, if I claimed: “Russia should stop illegally occupying Ukraine. That's an action that it can and should undertake unilaterally.
They should stop illegally occupying Ukraine, and stop committing human rights violations, war crimes and crimes against humanity. As long as Russia is the occupier and refuses to carry out the relevant UN resolutions, RUSSIA IS THE PROBLEM”.
Would you agree with that? — neomac
No, I don't believe Russia is responsible for the conflict in Ukraine in the same way that Israel is responsible for the war in Gaza.
Russia is part of the problem, and its invasion and occupation are illegal. I can agree to that much. — Tzeentch
3. Never since the Cuban Missile Crisis has the threat of a direct clash between Russia and NATO leading to the Third World War been so real.
[...]
And for this loot new rivers of blood will flow, for which the Biden family and all their Bandera bastard are responsible. — Dmitry Medvedev · Dec 8, 2023
“Evil” in a moral sense? — neomac
...so why do you think “neocon foreign policy” deserves the title of “primary” cause of this war? — neomac
So states do not enjoy moral rights but they enjoy legal rights like right to self-defence? How so? — neomac
Besides if you acknowledge that Ukraine has a legal right to self-defence and the West is not violating international laws by military supporting Ukraine, what should we do with the “provocation” accusation from Putin which doesn’t look neither moral nor legal, in your views? — neomac
Is Putin’s aggression of Ukraine pure “evil” or just “necessary evil”? — neomac
Why not in the same way? What is the difference? — neomac
Germany is sort of the paradigmatic example of the free rider problem in alliances. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I'm not sure what 'provocation accusation' you're talking about, but what Europe should do is pull the plug on military support for Ukraine. Helping another nation exercise their right to self-defense is only rational if it has a chance of succeeding. There is no such chance in the case of the Ukraine war, and thus Europe should not contribute to the illusion that Ukraine can win this war. Stopping the support will hopefully will bring Ukraine to stop sacrificing its people in vain sooner rather than later.
If Ukraine wants to continue throwing its people's lives away, then that's their right. However, Europe should not make itself complicit in such a senseless waste of life. — Tzeentch
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