Trump has had an instinctive ability to tap into a certain anti-establishment mindset and manipulate it to his advantage. — Baden
He's not playing 4D chess, so much as 1D checkers. — Baden
This is exactly what Trump and his sycophants are trying to achieve, although as SLX points out, Trump's mendacity is outweighed only by his utter lack of competence — Wayfarer
Trump’s really acting like the guy who, when a girlfriend dumps him, throws acid in her face so that nobody else will like her - ‘if I can’t have her, nobody else can, either.’ — Wayfarer
I have started this topic because I haven’t heard any good arguments for what underpins the concept of morality in the absence of religion. — Restitutor
seeking enlightenment inhibits enlightenment — The Opposite
But, I am wondering if there is ways to perhaps accelerate or sharpen the thoughts themselves — Thinking
One was about the conceptual basis of the conflict between Russia and the West, — jamalrob
and one was claiming that Putin's increasing authoritarianism is a response to perceived threats to his position. — jamalrob
You have to begin contributing here properly — jamalrob
I'll accept what you say about Putin's wealth if it makes you happy, — jamalrob
but for the purposes of this discussion I don't really care about it.
The subject of foreign intervention and territorial expansion by Russia has come up a few times in this thread, with a few of the usual suspects frothing at the mouth about Putin's evil designs, or some such caricature. — jamalrob
Some analysts claim Putin may be the richest man in the world. Bill Browder, a British-American financier who previously did business in Russia, has estimated that the Russian President is worth about $200 billion.
I think it's almost to Putin credit that he's made it seem as though Russia is a far bigger fry than it is. — StreetlightX
Paul Edwards This will be my last reply to you — Benkei
I was thinking about something along these lines today while daydreaming - that I seriously give very little shits about Russia as any kind of major world-level threat — StreetlightX
My take away from that was that my arguments apparently confuse you, which is probably why you never actually engage them. — Benkei
Seeing the world in good and bad is the actual philosophical failure here, allowing for no nuance or reflection — Benkei
Cartoonish, pretty much everything. Mainly, the idea that Putin is merely a gangster out for himself, bleeding the people dry so he can build more palaces for himself. It's simplistic and a bit ignorant, I think. — jamalrob
You have a cartoonish view of the Russian state. — jamalrob
in which case he might be seeking to continue and intensify the cold war against Russia. — jamalrob
Please stop talking to me — StreetlightX
Another dodge. — Benkei
The animosity to Russia makes very little strategic sense for me otherwise. — StreetlightX
I'm not sure who you're referring to here — jamalrob
I was looking for some serious analysis from people who know more than me. — jamalrob
I've read that discussion. To me it's a very unattractive, rather deluded and unhinged vision. — jamalrob
aside from all of that, the US has done some good things, but it still doesn't follow that US liberal interventionism is, currently, a wise way forward that will make things better on the whole. — jamalrob
By "liberal interventionism" I'm referring to efforts ostensibly to spread democracy or help suffering populations by means of interference in sovereign states: meddling in elections, imposing sanctions and other economic punishments, sponsoring opposition groups, regime change by direct military force, and so on. — jamalrob
Even if that's true, it doesn't mean they want the US to do it for them. — jamalrob
Intellectual dishonesty is dodging the same issue three times in a row — Benkei
which was a war that the US gave weapons to both sides in — Coben
Though the invasion led to the creation of Isis and this was certainly a threat to the neighbors — Coben
then changed to fighting an evil regime for the people of Iraq and then didn't give a shit about them in the long run. — Coben
The US ought to fuck right off from anywhere possible — StreetlightX
Irrelevant. You argued that it was just and right to invade Iraq to liberate the Iraqi people. — Benkei
As for the neocons, they always wanted to wipe Iran off the face of the earth — StreetlightX
Simple calculus is that Saddam killed less people during his entire reign — Benkei
But nuance and subtlety and actually thinking things through seem to be a problem — Benkei
Oh, and add to that such beauties as the "unitary executive theory" and that it was Obama who started military actions in Libya and Syria without congressional approval. Clear moral vision my fucking ass. — Benkei
Because your elections are bought and paid --> everything that derives from it is circumspect. — Benkei
You have to admit that some of the more recent attempts to show morally right balls ended up making things worse, as in Iraq? — frank
The question is irrelevant because anyone elected via the banana-republic system in place in the US is unqualified to have access to that button. — Benkei
What will the Biden presidency of the United States mean for the world? — jamalrob
This, along with the generally more bellicose tone of the Democrats over the past few years, leads me to wonder if we might be going to see an interventionist foreign policy even more ambitious and more dangerous than Bush's or Obama's. — jamalrob
From my point of view, this seems like it will only strengthen Biden's liberal imperialist agenda. — jamalrob