The loss of their “empire” after the collapse of Soviet Union principally due to NATO expansion and the need to recover their hegemonic status overshadowed by the Americans. — neomac
offensive means to threat Western security — neomac
Russian hegemonic ambitions. — neomac
promoted/pursued an anti-West alliance with other authoritarian states (like China and Iran) with hegemonic ambitions. — neomac
Russia’s military activity beyond its borders up until now shows an actual non-hypothetical pattern of “Western containment” — neomac
I know it's a very hard thing to grasp, — Wayfarer
As this one: acting as if Russia is not a threat to the West, when it is, just because the West ought to be peaceful, is reckless too. — neomac
As ever, this is all based on anonymous insider information, so use your sound judgement. — SophistiCat
Please inform us what blame the Ukrainians have / the country of Ukraine has for this war. — ssu
social inequalities and prejudices are enshrined in the languages we inherit. We all, here, inherit the language of the British Empire, and its legacies of racist, sexist, classist, and otherwise offensive attitudes. Overcoming these is difficult and has not happened just because the inequalities in the written law may have largely been removed. Old habits die hard. — unenlightened
Anyway, censorship being bad might be another reason the Ukrainians aren't into being ruled by the GKremlin? — jorndoe
Disagreements are occasions for anybody to review their beliefs and reasons, making them explicit, examine how they link together, find inconsistencies, inefficiencies, holes. And what makes this king of exchange philosophical to me is that we can dig further into our background assumptions, especially our conceptual frameworks. — neomac
here there is a whole package of deep assumptions of yours that would need some reviewing — neomac
BTW even opendemocracy is financed by grants from funds and trusts in the hands of philanthropic wealthy or ultracapitalists like Soros. And Soros isn’t so “well reputed“ either, is he? — neomac
My criteria for placing trust in source of information is not based exclusively nor primarily on the distinction between mainstream and non-mainstream as you seem to suggest. — neomac
Besides your argument looks questionable for 2 reasons: on one side, it recommends not to be dismissive toward views alternative to the ones spread by mainstream outlets while suggesting to be definitely dismissive toward the mainstream outlets (“mainstream outlets can't be trusted (and they definitely can’t)” as if mainstream outlets are like astrologists). — neomac
even if it was true that definitely mainstream outlets can’t be trusted, that doesn’t imply non-mainstream views can definitely be trusted — neomac
your argument is so general that it holds for any alleged non-mainstream view (islamists, nazis, anarchists, satanists, QAnon or flat-earth believers, etc.) — neomac
Hopefully, no one suggests gagging Chomsky (or worse) similarly. :) — jorndoe
Hmm Gotta' wonder what Putin would do with all that in case the diplomats came through with something... — jorndoe
Why didn't you vote idealist then? — Metaphysician Undercover
if you equate enlightenment and data-harvesting then there is probably no enlightenment to be had. — Wayfarer
Trails of (independent) evidence paint a picture and also suggests modus operandi, fingerprints, tell-tale tracks. — jorndoe
The shamming, organized re-enculturation efforts, subversion (mentioned in the thread prior) are also parts thereof.
...
Grabbing Crimea and eastern "insurgence" (followed by "annexation") are fairly hands-on type pieces of evidence — jorndoe
I think that the really deep aspects of the various world philosophical traditions do far, far more than just 'think about it'. They have their methodologies, strict, rigorous, and highly disciplined. — Wayfarer
As already said, “likelihood” expresses to me an assessment of the degree of confidence. There is no formula about this. Just informal assessment about what I’ve read so far from different sources — neomac
CSIS — neomac
CSIS is funded largely by Western and Gulf monarchy governments, arms dealers and oil companies, such as Raytheon, Boeing, Shell, the United Arab Emirates, US Department of Defense, UK Home Office, General Dynamics, Exxon Mobil, Northrop Grumman, Chevron and others. — https://fair.org/home/nyt-reveals-think-tank-its-cited-for-years-to-be-corrupt-arms-booster/
WilsonCenter — neomac
Approximately one-third of the center's operating funds come annually from an appropriation from the U.S. government, and the center itself is housed in a wing of the Ronald Reagan Building, a federal office building where the center enjoys a 30-year rent-free lease. — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodrow_Wilson_International_Center_for_Scholars
RUSI — neomac
I don’t think that non-US and non-Western administrations and media are immune from accusations about their honesty. The same goes for non-mainstream and anti-system source, not mention that they can absolutely be infiltrated, exploited and financed by foreign powers. What one can infer from such predicament or how we may cope with it is up for debate. — neomac
No specific evidence has been put forward to justify the two-step plan — https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/feb/13/russias-fsb-agency-engineering-coups-ukrainian-cities
a coup attempt in the works in Ukraine — ssu
lots of willing Quislings on it's side, starting perhaps from Viktor Yanukovich himself. — ssu
If I understand you correctly you are claiming that by denying that we can talk about the way things are independent of us I am talking about the way things are independent of us? — Fooloso4
So, would you say the world is external to human experience or not? — Janus
The idea of 'as it really is' seems to me to be intellectual quicksand, however. It can surely only ever be something in relation to something else? Do you think this is bad thinking? — Tom Storm
we go too far if we draw the conclusion that there is a way things are that is independent of us that we can know or talk about in a meaningful way. — Fooloso4
Do we experience it as it is? No. — Fooloso4
As opposed to claims about how things are independent of us. — Fooloso4
Things are for us as observed or conceived or experimented on by us — Fooloso4
the model and what the model is of are one and the same, — RussellA
If the Direct Realist doesn't claim that have they have direct knowledge of the world, what do they claim ? — RussellA
For the Indirect Realist:
1) We directly perceive sense data. — RussellA
Do we experience it as it is? No. — Fooloso4
The tree is real, and the tree as represented experientially is not the "way the tree really is" — hypericin
It is likely a faithful mapping of real properties of the tree, but it is a mapping — hypericin
don't know why you think I have "trouble with trees". I have none. — hypericin
I'm quite certian I'm not "seeing the tree as it really is" — hypericin
knowing what is meant often depends on context, which is often ambiguous. — RussellA
I think that I am seeing only one thing, a model of a tree in my mind. — RussellA
What exists in the world are elementary particles, elementary forces and space-time. — RussellA
a tree is is stored in the public domain — RussellA
I may believe that there is a tree in the field and can justify my belief, but a justified belief is not knowledge.
To be knowledge, the justified belief has to be true. There arrives the problem.
A Direct Realist argues that they have direct knowledge of the world, and therefore knows that there is a tree there. — RussellA
If I’m claiming that “Russia likely pursued regime change in the first phase of the war based on what has been reported”, I need to provide what has been reported. And I did. — neomac
Second “burden of proof” is limited by the available information — neomac
Generically speaking, the platforms I reported from (and they were just a part of the sources I consulted) are well reputed, domain-specific, corroborate each other and do not contradict my wider background assumptions. — neomac
I bet none of them are thinking 'what am I doing here?' or 'what does being an elephant mean, really?' They don’t have the predicament of selfhood. — Wayfarer
On the contrary, I'm quite certian I'm not "seeing the tree as it really is" — hypericin