Logic, mathematics, scientific empirical methods — neomac
...journalistic methods... — neomac
administrative/institutional methods — neomac
common sense — neomac
Well that depends on the reasons why one would opt for violence in the given circumstances. — neomac
the ratio of increasing the military, economic, and human costs of the Russian aggression for the Russians is in deterring them (an other powers challenging the current World Order) from pursing aggressively their imperialistic ambitions, and this makes perfect sense in strategic terms given certain plausible assumptions (including the available evidence like Putin's political declarations against the West + all his nuclear, energy, alimentary threats, his wars on the Russian border, his attempts to build an international front competing against Western hegemony, Russian military and pro-active presence in the Middle East and in Africa, Russian cyber-war against Western institutions, Putin's ruthless determination in pursuing this war at all costs after the annexation of Crimea which great strategic value from a military point of view, his huge concentration of political power, all hyper-nationalist and extremist people in his national TV and entourage with their revanchist rhetoric, etc.), of course. — neomac
Then violence may be a good way to persuade the Russians to curb their imperialistic ambitions. — neomac
It's step one in a line of argument designed to persuade me (or others reading) of your theory. — Isaac
persuading people through the threat of ostracism or insults or by repeating "putative" truths ad nausaum or pointing at somebody's "putative" inconsistency using maybe strawman arguments are all epistemically fallacious ways of persuading to me. — neomac
when there is no ground for rational/moral agreement violence is an option as viable as one can afford, and as valid as its effectiveness — neomac
hat is why Russian aggression and Western violent response to that have their "rhetoric" force in persuading or dissuading the two competing powers and other powers. — neomac
arguably — neomac
how about violence? Is it a way to persuade people? — neomac
They don't even try much. That would require trying to understand what the other guy is saying. Too complicated. — Olivier5
And on what grounds do we persuade? — neomac
what ground do we absolutely have to resolve narrative or political opinion disagreements? — neomac
when offered by ssu an opportunity to discuss just that — Olivier5
How long are those millions of people be away from Ukraine? What will be the effect of millions of Ukrainian children now growing up in a different country? How much will it change Eastern Europe? What are the effects for Ukraine as such a huge percentage is now refugees? — ssu
is it racism that East Europeans have taken up with open arms the refugees coming from Ukraine, but the migration several years before (and still taking place now in the Mediterranean) wasn't.
That could be a discussion. — ssu
Ask yourself. How much in the thread is following issues being debated: — ssu
Indeed without these elections I would talk about a coup too and Ukraine would be obviously quite undemocratic, as portrayed in the article. — ssu
That Ukrainians have shown their anger also in the election booth and demanded change in elections should be noted, but isn't. And of course there have been many administrations and elections since then and that now there is in charge in Ukraine a totally new political party that wasn't even around in 2014 doesn't matter at all. Nope, once you get the nazi card, you have the nazi card and people will use it at anything how ever long they want. — ssu
Ukraine is sinking into a chaos of uncontrolled violence posed by radical groups and their total impunity. Practically no one in the country can feel safe under these conditions — Amnesty
a veneer of patriotism and traditional values were allowed to operate under an atmosphere of near total impunity that cannot but embolden these groups to commit more attacks.
Far-right impunity...represents a dangerous threat to Ukraine’s statehood.
The western Putinistas are a small minority in most countries, tho a vocal one. — Olivier5
unaware that the world is a big and complicated place — Olivier5
Parochialism driven to excess — SophistiCat
If your position is that people should only discuss the goings-on in their home countries, then why did you open this discussion in the first place? — SophistiCat
Ukraine chose to build financial and diplomatic relations with the west, against the wishes of Russia and it's leaders. — creativesoul
All I am saying is that not all mutual benefit and agendas are nefarious. — creativesoul
Just because the US policy has a sorted history of hidden agendas and not so honest means, it does not follow that every US decision or policy has a hidden agenda and dishonest means. — creativesoul
Key words:Ukraine decided... — creativesoul
people in these countries do not speak so lightly about democracy being so to speak "just the same thing as dictatorship but with voting booths". They often hope it makes a difference. — Olivier5
Who are all these guys, and where are they discussing the impact on Ukraine, or the rest of the world? — Olivier5
an utterly callous disregard for civilian lives, launching unlawful deadly attacks in residential areas that have killed and injured civilians
They are usually about how equally destructive the US has been. But two wrongs don't make a right. — Olivier5
What I've said is that in the Russian (and earlier Soviet) way of warfare there is an extensive use of artillery. — ssu
the numbers from Afghanistan, Syria and the two Chechen wars simply show that Russia doesn't care so much about civilian casualties. — ssu
It would be interesting if you could tell us just who where oppose the idea that " American arms dealers, European financial institutions, and Western industries in general who stand to gain billions from a prolonged war which results in a ruined Russia." — ssu
any suggestion that a similar process could lay an equal amount of suspicion on American arms dealers, European financial institutions, and Western industries in general who stand to gain billions from a prolonged war which results in a ruined Russia. — Isaac
What makes you so certain that law enforcement and military units would side with the citizens to a sufficient degree? — Tzeentch
During the rise of communism in Russia, they did not. During the rise of nazism in Germany, they did not. During the era of racial segregation in America, they did not. In 1989 in China, they did not, to name just a few examples. — Tzeentch
Three days into the protests, the czar’s officials ordered the military and policy to break up the proests—using any means. The ensuing violence, says Harnett, claimed the lives of nearly 100. And on the next day, soldiers joined the demonstrators.
The army had enough.
Military support was key, as in 1933-4 the army could have removed Hitler. However once the SA was tamed in the Night of the Long Knives - and SA leaders who wanted to combine themselves with the military had gone - Hitler had major military support because he rearmed them, expanded them, gave them the chance to fight and early victories. Indeed, the army had supplied the SS with key resources to allow for the Night to happen. — https://www.thoughtco.com/who-supported-hitler-and-why-1221371
The PLA's involvement in the incident has had serious and immediate results for the military, including a marked decline in public prestige and a drop in morale. Over the long term, the 1989 events in China coupled with communism's global crisis suggest that the natural evolution of the CCP-PLA relationship from symbiotic to coalitional may increase the likelihood of an eventual army-party split. — https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0095327x9201800203
To move forward we also need to agree on whether or not a large armed citizen's revolt is an effective way of toppling a government. I think history clearly shows the effectiveness of irregular warfare and the failure of large nations to combat it, despite extreme advantages in manpower and technology. — Tzeentch
Perhaps provide some good reasons why you put all your faith in the United States government. — Tzeentch
We can talk about how likely it is for a government to misbehave to where a large part of the citizenry is willing to take up arms against it — Tzeentch
yet again you are making a conflict where there is no reason to. — unenlightened
We can disagree about things without casting moral aspersions at each other or exchanging insults. — unenlightened
Double down on your stupidity why not? — unenlightened
your insulting stupidity — unenlightened
Are you genuinely implying that you don't see any difference in the civilian death toll? — ssu
I would like to make a discussion of war that does not mimic its topic, and this does not help me. — unenlightened
And who is the target of your blame for this reprehensible post hoc deciding? — unenlightened
you want to try and make a partisan point of it. :sad: — unenlightened
Really? do you have a recent war to which it doesn't apply? — unenlightened
Ports and oil, I'd imagine, using Deep Throat's principle, 'follow the money'. — unenlightened
I'd say history and in recent times the track record of the United States military (the world's most advanced military) speak to the contrary.
Peasants with rifles are apparently not so easy to get rid of, no matter how much barbarism one is willing to resort to. — Tzeentch
You don't think people would be prompted to resist against government tyranny? As people have throughout history? — Tzeentch
It's you who is living in a fantasy, I'm afraid. A fantasy in which government is man's best friend, of which we have nothing to fear. — Tzeentch
for Putin, starting a war has been the way to get that popularity up. It worked earlier so well. — ssu


