It's a really simple question. It just requires you to identify the data gathering and communication method Ukrainians use that other nationalities do not have access to. — Isaac
how many Ukrainian dead are worthwhile to attain such an objective? — boethius
And that helps the legitimacy how? — Isaac
They are better informed than you and me though.
— Olivier5
How so? — Isaac
1) There's no mechanism in place by which they can make an informed decision, nor tell anyone what it is. — Isaac
2) They literally are being forced to fight. The country has mandatory conscription and adult males are banned from leaving. — Isaac
More than virtue, the defence of Ukraine sends a signal of strength. And it sends it to Putin, essentially.
— Olivier5
More bold statements without any evidence or argumentation and complete ignorance of the implications. — boethius
then one must actually argue why it's moral to instrumentalise Ukrainian lives in that way simply to "send a signal". Are you really embracing the position that any amount of Ukrainian death and suffering is justified as long as it "sends a signal" from NATO to Putin? — boethius
the entire entire idea that military support support to Ukraine (but not "too much") is a signal of strength is extremely debatable. — boethius
ven if it does happen, how many Ukrainian dead are worthwhile to attain such an objective? — boethius
the entire operation is simply a virtue signalling gesture.
But to who? The dead? — boethius
Have I argued anywhere that the elected president doesn't have a mandate? — Isaac
Over any significant period of time, demand for Western Products will fall causing a drop in standards of living in those countries. — yebiga
Russia (unlike Portugal) is an important source of energy and raw materials — SophistiCat
Portugal btw. was the last Western country to hold on to it's African posessions by fighting colonial wars (in the 1970's) — ssu
What are the odds that pampered westerners will stoically endure this looming impoverishment? — yebiga
interesting to find out what history will say about this. — ssu
... Putin’s assault on Ukraine and his attack on American democracy have until now been treated largely as two distinct story lines. Across the intervening years, Russia’s election meddling has been viewed essentially as a closed chapter in America’s political history — a perilous moment in which a foreign leader sought to set the United States against itself by exploiting and exacerbating its political divides.
Yet those two narratives came together that summer night at the Grand Havana Room. And the lesson of that meeting is that Putin’s American adventure might be best understood as advance payment for a geopolitical grail closer to home: a vassal Ukrainian state. ...
They're not the same, and they don't relate to the 2022 invasion. — Isaac
2. We'd tried a peaceful resolution to the border disagreements, it hadn't worked. — Isaac
3. We'd previously promised to defend Poland (again, in an attempt to avoid war), we then did. — Isaac
4 England at the time was a fully fledged democracy and had been for decades. Germany was an open dictatorship with openly racist agendas. — Isaac
5 Hitler's invasion of Poland wasn't a stage in a protracted civil war with Pro-Nazi insurgents in Poland. — Isaac
6 We now know that some of Hitler's intent (and practice) with regards to concentration camps was known to the allies. Concentration camps (and the like) — Isaac
We've already talked about that. — Isaac
I think sending thousands of men, women, and children to their bloody deaths over where those lines are is absolute fucking insanity — Isaac
Nationalism is not the mere acknowledgement that nations exist. Do I have to explain nationalism too? — Isaac
"Russians have Russian passports" - fine. — Isaac
I never claimed there's no such group. My claims are of the form "there's no such group as "the Russians", which...". It's about the properties of any such group. The group 'the Russians' shares the property of having Russian passports. No other. — Isaac
The discussion started with a comment about how 'Ukrainians' deserved a say in the control of Donbas. I disputed that such a group existed with that right. If you just want to spout off more virtue signalling about how much you dislike what the Russian forces are doing, do it in someone else's discussion, don't respond to me to do it. — Isaac
Not what I asked. — Isaac
And Chechen troops? Syrian troops? — Isaac
calling on people to "kill some more Russians" — Isaac
Better just to erect a massive fence to keep the bloodthirsty Orcs Russians in their place. — Isaac
we agreed that a government at war needs the support of its people in the rear
— Olivier5
We agreed no such thing. You argued that the US populace had no influence on government policy, then argued the exact opposite for the Ukrainian populace. I just pointed out the incoherence. — Isaac
The government of Ukraine are, unilaterally — Isaac
In addition to my response above, Ukraine is not currently a democracy. — Isaac
I would definitely argue that the average citizen of the US has more of a say (via lobbying their politicians, who lobby the US government, who lobby/fund the Ukrainian government), than the average citizen of, say, Lvov. — Isaac
Directly, it's up to the actual soldiers, diplomats and support staff doing the fighting/negotiating (they could refuse). — Isaac
Less directly, the government of Ukraine — Isaac
Less directly still, the government's funders, supporters, lobbyists and pollsters — Isaac
Absent a referendum or election I don't see how the Ukrainians en masse are going to get a say, — Isaac