Rather, it's what you haven't said. You keep talking about Ukrainians as if they were the only ones dying, the only ones who can stop this, the only ones in need of surrendering... What about the Russians? Won't you advise them to surrender too? — Olivier5
Millions of Russians don't want to die for Donbas either, but you don't seem to care for their lives so much. — Olivier5
That it's a poor corrupt country where the people have been long angry about their ruling politicians? That even those who have promised them change have disappointed too? — ssu
when the leader who starts a war against a country says the "country is artificial", there's not much appeasement that the country could have taken to avoid the war. — ssu
Surrendering would have only enforced the idea of Ukrainians being "lesser-Russians" or "little-Russians". — ssu
Of course you don't. And these people came all with their own flags to the stadium, which they cherish so much. — ssu
Documented, recorded, with satellite images backing it... — Olivier5
It seems the Ukrainians are successfully dismantling the group west of Kyiv, and have retaken Irpin.
An intercepted phone call recording was released by Ukraine’s Security Service late Tuesday, indicating total disarray on the Russian side in this area.
Ukrainians have agency alright. The Russians, not so much. An army of slaves. — Olivier5
And how well you know these independent states of Luhansk and Donetsk? — ssu
Neither Isaac or @StreetlightX or anybody else is saying such obvious pro-Putin arguments and willing to carve up Ukraine. Nobody else promotes such views. — ssu
Cool. Can you do this bit next? — Baden
a New World Order is that asecretivepower elite with a globalist agenda is conspiring to eventually rule the world through an authoritarian one-world government—which will replace sovereign nation-states. — https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_World_Order_(conspiracy_theory)
Medicine and science are controlled by political forces; their use for good or evil is driven by political considerations
The public health movement today is international. It is deeply concerned with the rights of the poor and those who have very few resources
Cease all research generally speaking? Or just in Russia? — boethius
How far does noncooperation with Russia go? Very, very far. All research, both ongoing and new, must cease immediately. Whatever can be done to minimize harm to existing subjects in a short period of time ought to be done, but that is it.
Similarly, no sale of medicines or therapies ought to be occurring, be they life-saving or consumer products. Putin will see to it that such shipments go to the military or are sold on the black market for revenue, and there is nothing pharma companies can do to stop that.
The Russian people need to be pinched not only by the loss of cheeseburgers and boutique coffee but by products they use to maintain their well-being. War is cruel that way, but if you tolerate a government that is bombing and shelling a peaceful neighbor to oblivion, then pharma must ensure that efforts to make Putin and his kleptocratic goons feel the wrath of their fellow citizens.
This is where it all goes wrong. It's acting in bad faith. — baker
I hope Ukraine and Russia can work out a peace deal soon and avoid this insane bloodshed. — Benkei
For Ukraine, joining the NATO security alliance is an aspiration enshrined in its constitution. And although Western leaders say membership is at best a distant prospect at best, Russia regards even the possibility as an existential threat.
Zelensky also clearly stated before the invasion that he had no hopes for joining NATO. — frank
As already mentioned:
Georgia and Ukraine are not in NATO and there are no current efforts to bring them in. — Olivier5 — Olivier5
people who actually research Russia and Putin's presidency for a living, point towards how Putin's motivations relate to the expansion of Russia, not to the fantasy of a Nato invasion. — Christoffer
the quote is outdated. And so are your other quotes as well. — Olivier5
Can you read what I wrote? — Christoffer
people who actually research Russia and Putin's presidency for a living, point towards how Putin's motivations relate to the expansion of Russia, not to the fantasy of a Nato invasion. — Christoffer
can you conclude that Russia wouldn't have invaded anyway? — Christoffer
Combining that with the research into his regime, there are a lot of puzzle pieces fitting together far better than much of the logical gap crap some people spew out over hundreds of pages in this thread. It at least pokes holes in the logic of your conclusions. — Christoffer
the move east [by NATO is] provocative, unwise and a very clear signal to Russia — Malcolm Fraser
Moving so quickly [to expand NATO] was a mistake. [...] Trying to bring Georgia and Ukraine into NATO was truly overreaching [and] an especially monumental provocation" — Former US defense secretary Bob Gates
[pushing] Ukraine into NATO [...] is stupid on every level. If you want to start a war with Russia, that's the best way of doing it. — Sir Roderic Lyne, former British ambassador to Russia
There was no provocation ... It's all on Putin. — Olivier5
Quote them, then, — Olivier5
The West is leading Ukraine down the primrose path and the end result is that Ukraine is going to get wrecked [...] What we're doing is in fact encouraging that outcome. — John Mearsheimer
[NATO expansion is] the most profound strategic blunder, [encouraging] a chain of events that could produce the most serious security threat [...] since the Soviet Union collapsed — Jack Matlock
if we move NATO forces toward Russia's borders [...] it's obviously gonna militarize the situation [and] Russia will not back off, this is existential — Stephen Cohen
NATO enlargement is utterly misguided and risky. True friends of Ukraine, and of global peace, should be calling for a US and NATO compromise with Russia. — Jefferey Sachs
I have yet to find anyone who views Ukraine in NATO as anything other than a direct challenge to Russian interests — Bill Burns
The "facts" are either what Putin says directly, which is undoubtedly the most unreliable source for any kind of fact, or a historic fact with the rhetorical suffix that it somehow connects to such motivations without any real connection established. — Christoffer
people who actually research Russia and Putin's presidency for a living, point towards how Putin's motivations relate to the expansion of Russia, not to the fantasy of a Nato invasion. — Christoffer
Cite one of these experts and we'll see if I'm inclined to 'brush them off'. — Isaac
people who actually research Russia and Putin's presidency for a living, point towards how Putin's motivations relate to the expansion of Russia, not to the fantasy of a Nato invasion. — Christoffer
As bombing and shelling ripped through Ukraine’s towns and cities in the first week of the invasion, the Ukrainian government still made a scheduled interest payment to its private lenders on time. The lenders—mostly international finance institutions, banks, and hedge funds—are all queuing up to collect their debts, with no sign of respite.
Since the invasion, Ukrainian dollar-denominated bonds, which were issued as part of its 2015 debt restructuring, have been trading at around 25 cents in the dollar. This reflects the high risk of default, but also means that if Ukraine continues to make its debt payments, Western banks and hedge funds could make profits of 300%.
The response of multilateral institutions has been to give even more loans to Ukraine. Since the war started, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has given a £1.4 billion emergency loan, while the World Bank has provided a $723 million financial package that includes $589 million in loans. These new loans are being piled on top of Ukraine’s already unsustainable debts. — https://jubileedebt.org.uk/news/cancel-ukraines-debt
There was no provocation that I can see. So no, i don't agree. It's all on Putin. — Olivier5
we all or nearly all agreed that many errors were made — Olivier5
never ever said I wanted any conversation to stop. I am just explaining what purpose is served by blaming NATO again and again — Olivier5
What are you even talking about now? — Christoffer
once this [criticism of NATO] is agreed, you would expect the conversation to go back to Ukraine. — Olivier5
Criticism of NATO was made here a long time ago, and we all or nearly all agreed that many errors were made and the US and EU have had their share of hypocrisy and immorality. But once this is agreed, you would expect the conversation to go back to Ukraine. Yet it does not... Some people want to talk about NATO again and again and again. — Olivier5
I understood from what he wrote that cheerleading a Ukrainian is morally worse than killing a Ukrainian. — Olivier5
As for boethius, he wrote clearly about his moral preference for murder over cheerleading. — Olivier5
