Doesn't mean there aren't risks, but proving someone, much less an entire institution, is "irrational" is a large hurdle — boethius
Policy makers in the West have gone off script a tad bit here and there, more or less just followed my advice — boethius
We don't know what they think. — boethius
we'd actually need to know what Russian leadership is trying to achieve exactly (which we don't). — boethius
Does Budapest have a proper red-light district? — Bitter Crank
Indeed it can. So you've supplied a mechanism by which the state can dominate the narrative, well done. — Isaac
Now explain why you providing such a mechanism in any way has any relevance whatsoever to the argument that threre is a similar dominance exerted over the narrative in the west by other mechanisms.
No. I was disagreeing because measures of press freedom are not measures of press dominance. — Isaac
your claim was that power was only the ability to wield brute force. — Isaac
the capitalist system commits violence against workers every day — Benkei
So Jeff Bezos? No power at all (bit of a wimp by all accounts). Rupert Murdoch? Completely powerless (I mean, I could definitely have him). Larry Fink? Couldn't influence a child, after all, he's a bit skinny isn't he? Koch brothers? Too old to use brute force, so completely powerless...
What kind of bullshit argument is that? — Isaac
My point exactly. But of course, my other point of course is that I don't think people like you give a shit about the latter question. — StreetlightX
If Russia remains in Ukraine for the next 10 years, murdering its citizens, destroying its infrastructure, and (further) killing it's economy, I wonder if Western observers will still proclaim that "Russia isn't winning" - because their metric of success is simply 'how good or bad is Russia doing' and not 'how much are the Ukrainians getting fucked' — StreetlightX
The fact that journalists who speak out against the dominant narrative in Russia are likely to be killed or imprisoned is a moral outrage. It doesn't, of itself, make their propaganda more dominant or pervasive than ours. That would be a separate question. — Isaac
To those who still insist the war is going 'disastrously' for Russia because they read that on CNN, ask yourself how Ukraine having the upper hand can be squared with a public admission they cannot take back their own territory and will likely have to give some of it away. — Baden
I mistook you for someone to be taken seriously, my mistake. — Isaac
For instance the RSF Press Freedom Index.What number? — Isaac
Yes, I do. Violence eliminates dissenting voices. Economics don't.Does economic suppression count? What about private buy outs of independent competitors? Do you have some good reason to relate 'dominance' to the use of violence as a tool?
Does it 'dominate'? What would be a measure of that, and how would you carry out such a measurement? — Isaac
Is it 'pervasive'? Again what would be a measure of that, and how would you carry out such a measurement? — Isaac
Vladimir Putin has placed the head of the FSB's foreign service and his deputy under house arrest after blaming them for intelligence failings that saw his army handed a series of embarrassing defeats in Ukraine, it has been claimed.
Andrey Soldatov, a respected author on the Russian secret services, said sources inside the FSB told him that Sergey Beseda, 68, head of the agency's foreign service, has been placed under arrest on Putin's orders.
Also arrested is Anatoly Bolyukh, Beseda's deputy, according to Soldatov, who said Putin is 'truly unhappy' with the agency - which he ran before becoming president.