You are blessed to be living in Sweden. A country needs excess resources to be able to give charity to its needy. When our grand orange offered to buy Greenland, its inhabitants retorted that Danish welfare topped our offering. — magritte
How do we know they're under-informed? Their conclusions are faulty. — Isaac
Not at all. It's mocking anyone suggesting that a war might 'just happen' and that the most powerful nation on the planet wouldn't have a position on that and be pulling strings as hard as it possibly can in a direction that suits it's agenda best. — Isaac
The tone of this thread has been that anyone talking about how America might share some blame is either uninformed, heartless, trolling, or actually working for the FSB. — Isaac
Why on Earth would any country be concerned with non-productive people who are an expensive drag to every nation? Being poor is an entirely different issue than countries not giving a shit. Poverty is a consequence of not contributing sufficient monetarily valued services or goods to the local economy. — magritte
What! Governments exaggerating a threat so that powerful industries can benefit. Sounds like some kind of crazy conspiracy theory to me.
Best just trust what the official experts have to say on the matter...
https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/russia-ukraine-news-latest-today-nato-us-reject-putin-claims-withdrawl/
...so that's settled then. The experts say Russia is preparing for war and I'm sure the billions that the pharmaceuticalarms industry will make is just a coincidence.
Of course, you might find some experts disagreeing, but with none of you being military strategists, you wouldn't want to be 'doing your own research', would you?
Besides, have you not read the news? Those nasty truckers are funded by the Russians, best be on the safe side, lest they fund any more peaceful protestsdomestic terrorists. — Isaac
Shall I quote them for you? — Isaac
This has been an absolute disaster for Russia and it's becoming more clear as the war goes on. It's the end times for Putin. What he can now basically do is just try to hold on to his power and survive. — ssu
A revolution happened. — ssu
A unified European defense has been mentioned here and there.
What timelines might that take to implement anyway...?
For something to become effective?
As far as I know, it's not particularly on anyone's desk. — jorndoe
Wtf? You're serious aren't you? You're actually going through with the idea that you've got some special insight which us mere mortals can't even question. — Isaac
Look, for you personally, we're all well aware that you're basically Jack Ryan — Isaac
How do you get 24/7 information unfiltered, just by being in Sweden/Finland? I'm in England, I don't get information about English military security, unfiltered. I still get it though the press, open source intelligence, and commentators I read - same as everyone else. I can't just walk up to MI5 and ask, just because I'm a local. Yet all these sources are online, for anyone in the world to access.
What sources of military and security information do Swedes and Finns have unfiltered access to which are not on the internet? — Isaac
in what military analysts describe as a victory for Ukraine. — frank
Oh you're quite right I will continue to point out how wrong you are about everything ever. Except for this one thing! But do continue to tell me how you don't care while caring a great deal. — Streetlight
What your security would be against Russian aggression. Are you suggesting that's something Swedes somehow know more about by virtue of their place of birth? How does this work exactly. If I'm born in Sweden but move away do I still have the magic? — Isaac
Well, yeah, I should imagine you have James fucking Bond round to dinner and everything... — Isaac
You're welcome to ignore me. But you probably won't. — Streetlight
You see that massive blue block on the left? That's not Europe. — Isaac
Geo-identity politics. How fun. This Christoffer bloke likes to whine about substance and the employs the most vapid form of ad hom imaginable. I mean there probably is something to the idea of local knowledge but considering this bloke writes better stories than Harry Potter, he doesn't get to keep his geo-idpol card. — Streetlight
Are they secret? — Isaac
Again, why would people living and working in Sweden have any more idea than us about the geopolitical implications of NATO membership? — Isaac
Geopolitical implications are usually discussed by...you know, geopolitical strategists. I don't know about the quality of your pubs over there, but here its mostly farmers and fishermen, it's an odd day on which an international foreign policy scholar turns up to regale us firsthand with his hot-off-the-press analysis of the situation. — Isaac
... So when the use of nuclear weapons is inconvenient to your position, then there's simply no risk ... based on Russia's lying word about "existential threat" ... which is up for interpretation anyways.
In short, if Russia keeps its word (about policies it could change anytime anyways), according to you, then there's no risk? — boethius
Ah ... I get it now, Russian's are stupid right up until the moment it's convenient to believe they aren't "that stupid" the moment that's convenient for you to believe. — boethius
How did it apply to US invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq ... or were you dismissively telling the US to "grow up" the whole time, and they finally listened and have "grown up" from their toxic fantasies of controlling middle east resources since retreating from Afghanistan last year? — boethius
the "grow up" theory of international relations is new to me. — boethius
As if a flimsy piece of paper is going to hold any weight at all against the gravity of nuclear annihilation. — Isaac
Unless you're literally walking to these sites in person you're getting your information from — Isaac
You wrote a three paragraph fantasy novella and I was complementing you. — Streetlight
Ok ... well then, when were they going to invade before?
And how does this concern for Finland and Sweden square with the idea Russia is losing in Ukraine?
If Russia can't even beat Ukraine, why would Finland and Sweden be in any danger at any point? — boethius
No I think I will criticize anything I want, especially your overactive imagination, thanks. You can continue to cry about it, of course. — Streetlight
And you were able to deduce all this from your armchair? — boethius
When do you expect Russia will be invading Sweden? — boethius
I think Christoffer should write the next Star Wars. A++ imagination. — Streetlight
Sweden shouldn't be a problem with their excellent weapons manufacturing. Not sure what the Fins bring. :razz: — Benkei
The likeliest response from Russia, that "military-technical response" it has promised, will be a restructuring of defensive and offensive assets inside Kaliningrad and Russia proper. Which actually is quite understandable and naturally Russia can do that. I'm not sure what some hybrid attack would do, actually. Already some assumptions have been proven false. — ssu
Then the possibility of a civil war loomed in the background. — ssu
Maybe he just thought taking over Ukraine would be worth it. — ssu
We don't give enough credit how well the last leaders of the Soviet Union did handle the collapse of Union. — ssu
keeps misunderstanding others, all the time, that's what he does here. He's good at it. I guess it stems from 'the will to be dumb', the desire for obscurity and doubt, the fear of clarity. What he calls 'hubris' is exactly that: clarity of thought, and he's pissed when you clarify things. — Olivier5
I guess the obvious thing would be to reinforce the air defenses in the Leningrad area and basically put more troops on the border. — ssu
We shall see, now that Finland has applied. — Olivier5
Well, that's exactly the question. Dawkins, quite ignorantly, says the purpose of life is to pass on genes or memes, which is just a dogmatic belief. — Hillary
Now it's true that life has evolved in a long process starting at the big bang, but who says all universal life would not have evolved into the same beings if the initial state were different? — Hillary
But science and religion can go hand in hand. Science lacks the explanation of where the basic ingredients of the universe come from, and gods can offer a reason for why it appeared. It's a totally different reason than the scientific take. Gods are not needed to fill gaps (science can work it out to the fundaments), but to give reason for a gapless state of matter in the first place. — Hillary
So, the mindless reason that science gives for existence (reducing it to coincidental combinations of lifeless particles) is replaced by a reasonable creation act with a purpose, endowing existence with a wonder science has taken away. — Hillary
BS, if you don't mind me saying. The "more rational and logical conclusions based on science" offer no solace, as gods are not invented but exist to resist exactly the scientific explanations. Science can't answer the reason for existence. Only gods supply us with pure ratio and reasin, and scientific explanations, useful as the are in the material domain, are the most irrational means for answering the question of the meaning of life. — Hillary
It's here
Russia has constantly threatened Finland and Sweden with "serious military and political repercussions" if they join NATO. For years now, actually. — Isaac
So you are making the argument that those women were accidentally raped in Columbia? I didn't think your bootlicking would really descend that disgustingly low, but apparently I was wrong. — Isaac
You've given no account of anything systematic other than some unspecified number of alleged rapes. — Isaac
Do you even have a concept of disagreement? Is everything either agreeing or misunderstanding? — Isaac
No, ssu's head. It was his post I got it from. — Isaac
It might be important for your evangelical condemnation, but I doubt the families of the 22,000 dead are much consoled by some apologist's theorising that they didn't mean to. — Isaac
Your sycophancy is not an argument. — Isaac
You're drawing a distinction between the two on the grounds of the numbers. — Isaac
The intention isn't in question. The solution is. Neutrality can be a defence against attack as well as a risk. — Isaac
No one's ignoring the brutality of the Russian attack, it's just that the brutality alone in Ukraine isn't evidence that it will do the same to every neighbouring country, nor that joining NATO will prevent it. — Isaac
Except it literally the one thing that has a credible threat of attack premised on it. — Isaac
Right. So the decision is based on whether declaring an intention to join NATO increases that risk in the intervening time, or increases the scale of the threat if Russia feel backed into a corner. — Isaac
No reason for it. My question was about the choice of rationality as a overarching criterion — Olivier5
But communism or Nazism are rational, far more rational than any humanism. — Olivier5
IOW, rationality alone is a recipe for disaster. — Olivier5
