That is the point: without US support, Ukraine, Korea, Vietnam, the Iraqi government, Israel, etc., wouldn’t have lasted too long. US support is crucial. Okay, then we ask: so what? Given this fact, the further question is: Why Korea and Ukraine and Israel or Nicaragua, but not Sudan or East Timor or Nigeria or Haiti?
— Mikie
So what?
What do you have against K-Pop? Of having South Korean electronic gadgets and cars? Of them being wealthy and not on the verge of famine? — ssu
Nothing wrong with supporting people against aggression. The question is: why these people and not others? — Mikie
And they have here the agency. We are just giving them support. What's so wrong with that. — ssu
They can call it quits and there's nothing that the West can do about it, if that happens. The fact is that Russia simply isn't just going to cede back all the territory if Ukraine will be neutral. — ssu
Weakening Russia is in our strategic interest. — RogueAI
but the CIA crafted a propaganda campaign both with Ukrainian intelligence and media as well as Western media and other governments. — boethius
All those interventions, including the theoretical ones aren't fairly simple.Is this a joke or are you really just incapable of understanding the fairly simple idea? — Mikie
Is this a joke or are you really just incapable of understanding the fairly simple idea?
— Mikie
All those interventions, including the theoretical ones aren't fairly simple. — ssu
Secondly, it's not a world where first the US acts and then everybody else responds. The US is just one player among others, even if it is a big player. — ssu
Then educate me. :confused:You really have no idea how the world works, in that case. — Mikie
So?but leaving stupid bullshit aside for a moment: the United States is by far the world’s superpower and has been for decades, beginning only now to be rivaled by China. — Mikie
And that's simply my point. US one actor, the largest, and Russia is another, China another and the local countries are also. If you don't take this account, then it might seem to you quite arbitrary just why someplace the US prevails and somewhere it doesn't.So yes, the US is one player, and a major one, shaping world affairs. — Mikie
No, it's not in my mind. If you do read my posts.Is the US a “bully”? If this fails under “a narrative” in your mind, then you can be easily ignored. — Mikie
If it's so powerful, why does it feel that Israel is calling the shots and the US simply follows? — ssu
And that's simply my point. US one actor, the largest, and Russia is another, China another and the local countries are also. — ssu
Yet many indeed think it's very bad, like Noam Chomsky. — ssu
you don't have to be a dissident, you can support your country when it does something good. — ssu
I think here below Chomsky tells it quite clearly why this criticism against the US. — ssu
I find it rather perplexing: — neomac
Or simple be ignorant of how authoritarian they are.If authoritarian countries are insulated from internal criticism, people can't do much to change it so it will remain authoritarian. — neomac
The smartest propaganda doesn't outright lie. It just picks part of the story and forgets the part that would talk against the agenda at.Besides, the free world can be infiltrated and intoxicated by foreign propaganda of authoritarian regimes to weaken the overwhelming foreign power that contains them . — neomac
Chomsky and others see as their role to criticize the US while to critique other countries "isn't their role". — ssu
totally silent on everything else — ssu
That's exactly what he says.Nope. Not what was said. — Mikie
Criticizing one's own society is all cool, and important, except when it tends to tunnel vision (or Kremlin-blindness, apropos). — jorndoe
Russia targets Netherlands' North Sea infrastructure, says Dutch intelligence agency
— Anthony Deutsch, Bart Meijer, Hugh Lawson, Susan Fenton · Reuters · Feb 20, 2023 — Feb 20, 2023
A Russian ship has been detected at an offshore wind farm in the North Sea as it tried to map out energy infrastructure, MIVD head General Jan Swillens said at a news conference. — Jan Swillens
Well, just look at the discussion of some here in PF about a) The Isreali Palestinians conflict or heck, even about the US Elections / Trump / Biden.What a stupid way of characterizing things. It’s like being in middle school. Embarrassing. — Mikie
Indeed.Right, simple minded people admire dissidents for speaking truth against power in their own country where they have an impact, that's why rival powers support dissidents in other countries not in theirs. — neomac
Chomsky and others see as their role to criticize the US while to critique other countries "isn't their role".
— ssu
Nope. Not what was said. — Mikie
That's exactly what he says. — ssu
It’s very simple: criticize countries all you like. Iran citizens can criticize Israel, etc. But that’s not what we admire dissents for— we admire them for speaking truth to power in their own country, where they can have an impact. — Mikie
Yet when you just criticize one actor and be totally silent on everything else — ssu
When speaking specifically about dissidents — those critical of their own countries — it’s kind of silly to ask “is there anything good about the US foreign policy?” The response, “All the countries we haven’t invaded — I like that,” and his explanation of why it’s silly is pretty obvious. In that context, it’s “not the job” of a dissident to discuss things he likes is clear. — Mikie
and the fact that Ukraine is extremely corrupt (meaning people with power do bad things against the interests of the population) — boethius
is complete bullshit. Another ridiculous misrepresentation. — Mikie
Republicans denounce Russia propaganda within their own party:
https://www.aol.com/news/luxury-yachts-other-myths-republican-090000423.html — neomac
Was just going over some analyses of seemingly influential dis/mal/misinformation campaigns, maybe I'll post something later. Will likely remain applicable for the foreseeable future. — Mar 8, 2024
I admit he's been a critique of Israel. But he mainly focuses on US actions because of the reasons he has given. That's simply a fact.Critiquing other countries is something Chomsky often does. There’s plenty to criticize all over. He’s been a fairly staunch critic of Israel, Brazil, Indonesia, etc. Despite your bogus suggestion, he’s done so for decades. — Mikie
Don't forget the unlikely battlefield of the Sudanese civil war:So, anyway, the war seems to roughly have drawn up ...
▸ Russia, Belarus, North Korea, Iran, China
—versus—
▸ Ukraine, Europe, North America, South Korea, Australasia, Japan
... or something along those lines. So far at least. Much like certain someones' idea of a bipolar :smile: world. — jorndoe
He’s been a fairly staunch critic of Israel, Brazil, Indonesia, etc. Despite your bogus suggestion, he’s done so for decades.
— Mikie
I admit he's been a critique of Israel. But he mainly focuses on US actions because of the reasons he has given. — ssu
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