But is there a limited pot of wealth? — Srap Tasmaner
an idea like theft — well that's social right? How far would you want to take the claim that British colonists stole North America from its inhabitants at the time? Did they own it? — Srap Tasmaner
Were their claims to ownership "natural" somehow? Or stronger than our later claims because earlier? Is that how we divvy up the earth — whoever gets there first? — Srap Tasmaner
My point was that IBM created a lot of value, meaning stuff, services, and intellectual property, that did not exist before, and their customers handed over wealth to get it. — Srap Tasmaner
Pragmatic reasoning based on your ideologically-inspired goals, questionable as anybody else’s. — neomac
What is the well-being of the people? — neomac
Don’t I show compassion for the well-being of “the people there” if I show my support for a Ukrainian feelings against Russian oppression — neomac
Why should I “solely” be concerned for the well-being of the people there, to prove that I’m a compassionate outsider? — neomac
How do you think is capable to “solely” be concerned for the well-being of the people there? — neomac
it can be a means to achieve “humanitarian goal” if by “humanitarian goal” you are referring to human rights as we, in western democracies, understand them and sovereignty can be a pre-condition for the implementation of state apparatuses supporting human rights. — neomac
I'm saying that Nazi supporters are basically Nazis. — unenlightened
You would know why if such a feeling was present. — Seeker
one can relate to having pain and dont want to inflict such harm upon another living being? — Seeker
Yet there in Crimea too the totalitarian system of Putin's Russia is evident and the treatment of the Tatars is telling. The annexation has led to the detention and disappearance of dissenters, the persecution of ethnic and religious minorities and the stifling of the media. The going on in Donetsk and Luhansk has been even worse. — ssu
AND THAT PROVES MY POINT. Thank you. :cheer: — ssu
Cracking on, sir, as ordered. — unenlightened
The claim I'm making is that from the treatment of the Chechens showcases the way that Putin would handle the territories that he has annexed from Ukraine. Similar treatment of "Russian citizens". — ssu
To defend against the Nazi threat was justified, because of the wickedness of Nazi ideology. But Ukrainians should join Putin's Russia (which as I stated earlier, fought a genocidal war against the Chechens...which were/are citizens of Russia, actually). — ssu
I consider that Poland, Germany and France could very well get threatened in the future if Russia wins in Ukraine. — Olivier5
That was different. To defend against the Nazi threat was justified, because of the wickedness of Nazi ideology. But Ukrainians should join Putin's Russia (which as I stated earlier, fought a genocidal war against the Chechens...which were/are citizens of Russia, actually). — ssu
So why didn't your country surrender to Hitler and join the Third Reich and then "swell the ranks of the dissenting voices in Germany and increase the chances of a regime change there that would benefit thte whole nation". — ssu
who cares about the Uighurs? — Olivier5
We care about Ukraine because we identify with them, because we could very well be next. — Olivier5
he says that in politics, naįve boyscouts often do more damage than shrewd calculators. — Olivier5
if you don't have to cause other animals pain unnecessarily, why do so? — schopenhauer1
It's called geopolitics, not boyscoutism. — Olivier5
We are not supporting Ukraine for humanitarian reasons though, but to protect ourselves. — Olivier5
Staking a lot of people and future on such a reason (unjustified at the moment), speaking on their behalf, is a bit bold (perhaps presumptuous, especially if it's not your children that have to live with that decision), at least it seems that way to me. — jorndoe
Not perhaps with the ferocity as during the war — ssu
How does this pragmatic approach get started when one side is run by a man in a bunker calmly loading his revolver for the final scene? You make it sound like something his opponents could initiate by themselves. — Paine
what's not going on is IBM taking, for itself, some fixed amount of wealth from some third-world society. Colonialism is an important part of the story, but it's not a simple matter of theft (as you put it earlier). What about exploitation? Yes, of course, but we have to start with an analysis that doesn't treat exploitation as simple theft. — Srap Tasmaner
How can the good faith be extended to the Russians in this regard when Putin has played so many for fools for doing it in the past? — Paine
Think about what would have happened if Trump was president when Putin invaded. The US wouldn't have supported Ukraine. But we have Biden, so the US did.
In this case, the outlook of the US Commander in Chief is the deciding factor, not the lust of arms dealers — frank
If you're saying the US is particularly subject to the influence of war profiteers, you may be right. Still, they can't start wars all by themselves (usually). — frank
my point is that what is shared is horror at what Russia is doing. — Paine
That is why borders are defended. — Paine
what kind of business model did you have, if you have to pay people so little even to keep the business afloat? Maybe that's a business that doesn't really work. — Srap Tasmaner
we should both raise the minimum wage and provide support for employers and employees to get through the transition to a better way of doing things. To say, it will hurt to change, is not an argument that where you're at is good. — Srap Tasmaner
I submit there's a transition there from a business arrangement that is in some sense inclusive to one that is extractive, but not a shift from socialist to capitalist. — Srap Tasmaner
Likely because the Russians felt time was running out. — Tzeentch
They aren't fighting a war to improve their press freedom index, they are fighting because Russia, a state that perpetrated a massive genocide against them in the 1930s, and another large scale repression after WWII, invaded them and has been raping and pillaging in areas they take. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If either Russia or Ukraine's public estimates of each other's losses were reflective of reality, we'd see a lot fewer functional units able to engage in operations. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Before the war, Ukraine was at 68 on the Press Freedom Index, Russia at 51, "problematic" (3/5) versus "very serious," (5/5).
Ukraine fairs worse on corruption indexes though relative to Russia, but Russia still does worse. Suprisingly though, Ukraine actually has fairly low inequality, which I always found surprising, but it's also significantly poorer than Russia. — Count Timothy von Icarus
They un-liscenced three TV channels from broadcasting but didn't ban them. Plenty other outlets are still on, and even those 3 TVs are still operating, but just on YouTube. — Olivier5
I think it is an underplayed risk that Putin might be toppled, or simply die or be disabled by health issues, and that even more reckless and hardline leaders take control. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ukraine has a score of 36,79 and Russia 43,42. — boethius
I am talking about freedom of press, as you know. It is an important democratic principle. It's not about 'kits'. — Olivier5
According to RSF, there was avast difference between the two countries in terms of freedom of press and violence towards journalists. — Olivier5