Note that the suffering is mutual. Over the past few months, the evidence is that the Russians suffered the most. I wonder why you keep forgeting their sufferings… — Olivier5
when you act to preserve your life in the face of a lethal threat, your actions can't be condemned, even if your actions result in the death of your attacker. — frank
I think you're just procrastinating instead of studying how to trade on the currency market. — frank
Uh huh. — frank
Since it's a matter of self-preservation, it can't be condemned. — frank
This isn't 1914 or 1939. — ssu
2010. — ssu
Harm is a reason not to harm. If you have empathy that is. — Benj96
The point is, again, that the authority has to justify it. — NOS4A2
have no logical reason to stop me from hammering a toothpick under your fingernail. — Leftist
To say that torture is bad is to say that moral claims can be true. — Leftist
it can be justly reasoned that a father is the legitimate authority of his child. — NOS4A2
it's the demonstration that NATO is perfectly capable of avoiding escalation into WW3 — Olivier5
maybe AP even got the same info but left out "produced" for click bait effect. — boethius
I wouldn't say that my trust in Zelensky has been shattered. Would you? — Olivier5
This is getting ridiculous. The Ukrainians are destroying [our] confidence in them. Nobody is blaming Ukraine and they are openly lying. This is more destructive than the missile
@Olivier5@Christofferraises the spectre of the Baltic States and Poland being subject to Russian terror — Benkei
Ukraine, Poland, all of Europe and the world must be fully protected from terrorist Russia, — Zelensky
We don't know what he knows, though. — Olivier5
I don’t know 100 percent — I think the world also doesn’t 100 percent know what happened,... We can’t say specifically that this was the air defense of Ukraine. — Zelensky speaking to the New Economy Forum in Singapore
We don't know what he knows, though. — Olivier5
I think one could be forgiving of a certain rashness in judgment, under the circumstances. — Olivier5
What furores? Haven't seen that. Last time I checked, we don't know who did it. Isn't it irresponsible to publicly declare a culprit, on no other ground than some kind of 'gut feeling'? — Olivier5
I'm entitled to my opinions and to not seeing them branded as some sinister backslash. — Olivier5
I am just pointing out how such an explanation for the Russians' flight from Kherson is not based on facts, and likely biased. Call me intolerant. — Olivier5
the usual meaning, which implies a lack of lies and dissimulation — Olivier5
A few pointers and indicators about people arguing in bad faith:
1. No data is good enough for them, except theirs. They are likely to disregard entire sciences and throw away vast amount of data just because they can (or must).
2. On the other hand, they choose to trust and accept uncritically any data that seems to buttress their view, without ever wondering if it's genuine or manipulative. They are eager to believe alternative views and that makes them easy to manipulate.
3. They misinterpret even their own data, like when you pretended to confuse an in vitro finding with an in vivo conclusion. This is done on purpose and is part of the lying.
4. They tend to essentialize their opponents, at least in their rhetoric. Whether it's the Jews, climate scientists, politicians, the CIA or the medical establishment, they pretend to believe that their (invented) enemies -- all of them or nearly all of them -- are essentially, fundamentally evil and will always remain so.
5. From 4, it follows that they see no solution. They will criticize any proposal or policy around, but can't propose anything cogent themselves. It's about denial and negativity, about lying and poisoning the well of knowledge for others, not about proposing new knowledge or constructively moving forward. — Olivier5
Choosing between downing incoming bombs and letting them fall isn't much of a choice. (NASAMS can help, too. :up:) Could always try to calculate (expected) numerical differences I guess; there is a fair amount of data to go by: — jorndoe
It's insane what people demand of him in the situation he's in from behind the safety of our own nations. — Christoffer
Maybe they are a bit smarter than you are? — Olivier5
Paul Massaro, a prominent American supporter of Ukraine and member of the U.S. Helsinki Commission, said around the same time that “Russian terrorism” had reached Poland, adding shortly after that it was “[h]ard to believe this was an accident.”
“Very concerned by Russian missiles dropping in Poland,” tweeted Slovakian Defense Minister Jaroslav Nad at 2:46 pm. “Will be in close contact with [NATO allies] to coordinate [a] response.”
A “senior European diplomat” echoed Nad in a Politico piece, saying that it was “appalling to see a desperate regime attacking critical infrastructure of Ukraine and hitting allied territory with victims.”
Anders Aslund of the Atlantic Council argued at around 3:30 pm. In a message aimed directly at President Joe Biden, Aslund said, “You have promised to defend ‘every inch of NATO territory.’ Are you going to bomb Russia now?”
Sergej Sumlenny, a prominent European policy expert, implied in a viral tweet that the attack was an intentional extension of Russia’s assault on Ukrainian infrastructure.
Mykhailo Podolyak, one of the top advisors to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, declared that the strikes were “not an accident, but a deliberately planned ‘hello’ from [Russia], disguised as a ‘mistake.’”
Zelensky tweeted that the “Russian attack on collective security in the Euro-Atlantic is a significant escalation” of the conflict.
Podolyak maintained that NATO should enact a no-fly zone in Ukraine,
NATO will NOT respond even if it they conclude the missile was fired by Russia. It's evidently a mistake, a stray missile. Calm down already. — Olivier5
NATO does not take its orders from Zelensky. — Olivier5
The fact is that the US and Poland have both said conflicting things within their own nations so there's nothing conclusive at all about this. — Christoffer
Andrzej Duda, the Polish president, said that from the information Warsaw had, the missile was “an S-300 rocket made in the Soviet Union, an old rocket, and there is no evidence it was launched by the Russian side”.
He added that it was “highly probable that it was fired by Ukrainian anti-aircraft defence” and “unfortunately fell on Polish territory”. — https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/nov/16/poland-president-missile-strike-probably-ukrainian-stray
if it was Russia's, then Zelensky knows that it won't lead to an Article 5 consequence — Christoffer
Russia's "demands" in such peace talks have been "a total surrender of Ukraine". — Christoffer
Either Zelensky is optimistic about escalation not really escalating to something I'd rather not think about or that was a hell of a cynical political move. — Benkei
Or he just genuinely believes that the missile that crashed in Poland was not fired by Ukraine. It's not like the evidence is out there for everyone to see. — Olivier5
And hence as you cannot comprehend them, your views aren't much worth of discussion. — ssu
against all evidence — Olivier5
there's no evidence of any peace deal — Olivier5
Russian general admitted on TV that they couldn't supply the troops on the right bank of the Dniepr and thus had to withdraw. — Olivier5
Anders Åslund's suggestion came up earlier, others have been aired — jorndoe
He cannot imagine (or admit) that the Russians are forced to leave Kherson so he must imagine that there is some mysterious secret peace deal behind it all. — Olivier5
The Russian retreat from Kherson. — Olivier5
What position, exactly? — Olivier5
against all evidence — Olivier5
that's when they blame the US for all, the invasion bombing annexations re-culturation whatever (the constellations?), a diversion often enough playing right into Putin's hands (and their propaganda) by the way. :down: The US ain't the center of the world. — jorndoe
Better stop shooting down missiles and kamikaze drones then — jorndoe
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov accused some countries of making "baseless claims" about the missile incident and said the US response has been more measured in comparison.
"In this instance, attention should be paid to the measured and more professional response from the American side," he said
Meanwhile, Ukraine's said allegations that one of its own missiles had landed in Poland were a "conspiracy theory."
"Russia now promotes a conspiracy theory that it was allegedly a missile of Ukrainian air defense that fell on the territory of Poland. This is not true. No one should buy Russian propaganda or amplify its messages," Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said on Twitter.