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Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
Oddly Hugh I can’t remember the last time you actually addressed a point made. It’s all playing the man, not the ball.
That said if all I had to work with was supporting sending Ukranians to their deaths in the name of western imperialism I’d probably play the man too. What little consensus remains over Ukraine will be gone by 2025. A new boss in town in Washington and who knows. This could be all over by February. Before a single F-16 ever saw action. |
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I may well have underestimated Boris’s commitment to “let the bodies pile high” in the earlier waves though. Not convinced we saw any economic benefit though but I see little value in resurrecting the Covid thread to discuss our economic stagnation given the multitude of ways the Conservatives can be blamed for it. Efforts to keep Trump of the ballot may well succeed, or Biden might see some improved cognitive condition between now and November. But I can only make a judgement based on my perception of events. Other interpretations are available. |
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It’s pointless replying to your posts with counter-points, because the counter-points have all been posted before, such as the very high likelihood of Putin using a cease-fire to re-arm and re-populate his military before his third invasion of Ukraine, just get poo-poohed by you… Your vatnik pro-Russian posts are laughably transparent, even with your crocodile tears over lack of elections and conscription, even though the same thing happened in the U.K. when it was under threat of invasion. ---------- Post added at 13:23 ---------- Previous post was at 13:21 ---------- Quote:
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Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
I’m not sure I’ve made a single post that’s “pro-Russian” - an interpretation of events that predicts an outcome of Ukrainian defeat (on some level) as an observation of objective reality isn’t in an of itself a “pro”-Russian stance.
I’ve certainly suggested ways that Ukraine, or NATO, could effectively use any period to leave themselves in a better position to defend later. I absolutely reject your sleight on my concern for conscripted Ukranians as “crocodile tears”. There’s nothing incorrect about the statements that there are efforts to remove Trump from the ballot, nor that Biden is clearly suffering from cognitive decline. |
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Try actually talking to a Ukranian rather than sourcing info frrom Russia. They are easy to find depending on where you look. |
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It would seem that they quite simply do not have the manpower to push Russia back. https://cepa.org/article/ukraines-wa...iption-crisis/ |
Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
Scaring thing is that if Trump get in, he will more than like pull all US equipment and resources from Ukraine
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I'm starting to think you're getting sponsored to post "Ukranians getting conscripted (against their will)", given how often you repeat it. |
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---------- Post added at 06:09 ---------- Previous post was at 06:06 ---------- Quote:
I did see a Ukraine flag at their match in Germany with "give us elections" at kick off swiftly removed. Of course, it must have been the Kremlin that instigated it. Ukrainian refugees couldn't possibly want democracy. ---------- Post added at 06:16 ---------- Previous post was at 06:09 ---------- Quote:
It's only an existential threat, after all. Of course no rational person could make this observation, it must be a Kremlin endorsed line. |
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And very happy for someone to explain to me how and why it is inaccurate. |
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We conscripted from the outbreak of WW2 but extended it to unmarried women and all men up to 60 in 1941 because ancillary services (civil defence, police, women’s army auxiliary) were getting too few volunteers. The British armed forces have never wanted to go back to conscription because it always causes training and discipline issues you don’t get in a willing, professional volunteer army. There is no reason to suppose human nature is very much different in Ukraine today. So, yes, jfman’s words are factually correct. But like a sort of Farage of the Far Left, he is very good at leaving inferences hanging in the air (which he might later deny he made if they prove objectionable). And the inference here is that people being conscripted against their will is evidence that the war does not have popular support, and that the Ukrainian ‘regime’ is unpopular, avoiding democratic accountability and possibly illegitimate. As others have noted, we faced our own existential struggle between 1939 and 1945. In that time, as well as conscripting people into various forms of national service far more broadly than Ukraine has done, Parliament passed Acts on 2 occasions extending its own life beyond the norm (The Prolongation of Parliament Acts, 1940 and 1942). There is nothing happening in Ukraine that is out of the ordinary for a democratic state facing an existential threat. Unless of course you’ve been captured by that part of Russia’s information operations that has led you to think otherwise. Note, they don’t need you to think Russia is in the right. They just need you to think Ukraine might be in the wrong for your voice to contribute to their wider aim of making support for Ukraine in democratic western states harder to sustain. |
Re: Russia has invaded Ukraine
Tl;dr I’m right. Lots of historically irrelevant narrative from conflicts almost a century old. Anyone who disagrees with the official western narrative is, automatically, parroting Russian narrative.
Support for Ukraine is western states is waning because without adequate commitment and support - which the US have consistently not given - it’s simply a fools errand. And the best justification is it keeps Russia away from Poland. While strategically a noble aim, sacrificing a generation of Ukrainian men seems like the kind of thing you should at least have their consent for. Ukraine have banned opposition political parties, trade unions, and broadcast media that doesn’t endorse the state narrative. Journalists have found themselves followed, and even conscripted, to intimidate and silence them. And that’s just the it’s in the Guardian. This is absolutely not the norm. Nor a “Russian narrative”. While I appreciate it’s a useful trope to censor legitimate criticism, I’m not having it. Much like the insult of “the Farage of the Far Left”. |
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Mmmhmm. The biggest state-on-state armed conflict in history has nothing to tell us about the biggest-state-on-state armed conflict that has since occurred. Obviously. Tl:dr …. Your argument’s holed below the water line, but that’s what happens when you get your opinions from Russian botnets. It is by no means a fools errand. The White House is presently preoccupied with worrying about a total Russian collapse at least as much as it worries about someone in Moscow going mad and authorising a small nuclear detonation. They remember USSR 1991 and they don’t want it to happen to the motherland. For that reason, they give Ukraine what it needs to survive (which, incidentally, is somewhat less than they are treaty-bound to do as a result of persuading Ukraine to give Russia all its nukes) but not what it needs to win. I happen to think the policy is flawed because Russia has doubled down and is going to destroy itself trying to take Ukraine either way. It is suffering a bad case of sunk cost fallacy. The question is whether that happens quickly or slowly, and whether half-hearted Western aid emboldens the likes of China vis a vis Taiwan. |
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