War

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
@sunni can you please do something with this Putin’s ass licker @0potato0. You have closed @Sedan thread for backdoor “Russian propaganda” which actually was not propagating Russia at all and you are leaving this creature posting his BS openly favouring Russian invasion???
i don't like him worth a fuck, but he is in the proper forum, they closed down sedan because after multiple warnings that politics belonged in this forum, they still talked about politics in the growers area...you can't ban someone for having offensive ideas, only for using offensive language, or making threats...that's what separates us from them to begin with
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Russian economy taking 'serious blows,' Kremlin says
A Kremlin spokesperson on Wednesday said that the Russian economy was taking "serious blows" amid sanctions imposed by foreign governments as Moscow continues its attack on Ukraine.

"Russia's economy is experiencing serious blows," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said during a call with foreign reporters, according to CNN.

"But there is a certain margin of safety, there is potential, there are some plans, work is underway," he added.

Peskov's remarks came after a question about a comment made by President Biden during Tuesday night's State of the Union address.

"Russia’s economy is reeling and Putin alone is to blame," Biden said in his speech.

The president also asserted that the sanctions in place against Russia thus far contributed to a 30 percent loss in the value of the ruble and to the Russian stock market losing 40 percent value in less than a week.

Since Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, Western countries have imposed harsh sanctions on the country.

On Tuesday, Biden announced that the U.S. would close off American air space to all Russian flights, following similar action from the European Union and Canada.

Biden said the move would work toward "further isolating Russia – and adding an additional squeeze –on their economy."

The U.S. has also imposed other sanctions including kicking certain Russian banks out of the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT), a major international banking system. The U.S. has also promised to impose measures to prevent the Russian Central Bank from undermining sanctions and bolstering the ruble by using its reserves.
The value of his salary has taken major blows too! All government employees including the security services are gonna be hammered by inflation and have a 50% effective pay cut at least, pensions for the elderly are becoming worthless...
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
China's Belt and Road is a Ponzi Scheme,it's goal,to bribe poor countries w/infrastructure investment,then have them default on payment,which in turn China forecloses by annexing territory for ports or bases,it's schylocking on a international scale,capeche
and the entire world knows it...if they still decide to get involved with china, then they get what they get
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
i don't like him worth a fuck, but he is in the proper forum, they closed down sedan because after multiple warnings that politics belonged in this forum, they still talked about politics in the growers area...you can't ban someone for having offensive ideas, only for using offensive language, or making threats...that's what separates us from them to begin with
As long as he's not getting paid by a hostile foreign power or is a bot. Even Facebook is banning them and they have no morals! I don't mind debating different opinions, but this guy's are incredible, even for a Russian or a sympathizer! Anybody with those language skills and is web savvy knows this is Putin's war and has ulterior motives. If he's in Sweden then he's a Swedish Nazi or a GRU contractor.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
China Says it Won't Join in Financial Sanctions on Russia
China won't join the United States and European governments in imposing financial sanctions on Russia, the country's bank regulator said Wednesday.

China is a major buyer of Russian oil and gas and the only major government that has refrained from criticizing Moscow's attack on Ukraine.

Beijing opposes the sanctions, said Guo Shuqing, the chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission.

"We will not join such sanctions, and we will keep normal economic, trade and financial exchanges with all the relevant parties," Guo said at a news conference. "We disapprove of the financial sanctions, particularly those launched unilaterally, because they don't have much legal basis and will not have good effects."
then fuck china...they won't have a trading partner soon, and no one in EU will sell them one fucking cc of fuel...they can burn government bullshit to keep warm next winter
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Fighting Rages in Ukraine as Russian Troops Claim City
Russian forces said they had captured a port on the Black Sea on Wednesday as Russian and Ukrainian troops battled for another city and Ukraine's leader said Moscow wanted to "erase" his country.

The Russian army said it had taken control of Kherson, as its troops advanced and pounded cities across southern and eastern Ukraine, defying sanctions and international isolation.

Russian paratroopers also landed in Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-biggest city, triggering clashes in the streets, Ukrainian forces said. The emergency services said four people were killed in the city on Wednesday and there was now "mass shelling and bombing" in the center.

On Wednesday, however, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said Russian forces were in now "full control" of Kherson, a city with a population of 290,000 people.

He said talks were under way between the Russian army and local authorities on maintaining order, protecting the population and keeping public services functioning.

Ukraine's army said there was a battle in the country's second city Kharkiv, in northeast Ukraine near the Russian border with a population of 1.4 million.

"There is an ongoing fight between the invaders and the Ukrainians," the army said on messaging app Telegram.

Ukrainian forces said Russian strikes hit a residential block and a government building in the city on Tuesday killing 18 people, drawing comparisons to the massacres of civilians in Sarajevo in the 1990s and condemnation for what Zelenskiy called a "war crime."

As the civilian death toll mounts, there is growing opposition to the conflict within Russia, with thousands detained for taking part in anti-war protests. "I am urging everyone to take to the streets and fight for peace," jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny said in a statement posted on Facebook. He called on Russians not to be afraid of going to prison. "Everything has a price and now, in the spring of 2022, we should pay that price."

In the latest development, the EU banned broadcasts of Russian state media RT and Sputnik and excluded seven Russian banks from the global SWIFT bank messaging system.

The list did not name two major Russian banks, Sberbank and Gazprombank, which were left connected to SWIFT to allow EU countries to pay for Russian gas and oil deliveries.

Sberbank, Russia's largest lender, said Wednesday it was leaving the European market after coming under pressure from Western sanctions.

Apple, Boeing, Disney, ExxonMobil and Mastercard announced Tuesday in rapid succession steps to withdraw or freeze business in Russia.

German logistics giant DHL joined them on Wednesday, saying it would stop deliveries to Russia and Belarus, which has allowed the passage of Russian troops to attack Ukraine.

"Going forward, Russia will be a pariah, and it's hard to see how they can restore anything resembling normal interactions in the international system," said Sarah Kreps, professor at Cornell University.

Aluminium and gas prices hit record highs on supply fears and the Moscow Stock Exchange failed to open for a third day running.

In an important strategic victory, Russian troops attacking from the Crimean peninsula said they had linked up along the Azov Sea coast with pro-Moscow separatists in eastern Ukraine. The city of Mariupol was reportedly encircled. U.S. satellite images show that Russia has massed artillery and armored cars near Kyiv, raising fears of an imminent assault.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Russia Faces Loss of Digital Sovereignty
Russia has made some serious progress in import substitution, but the new technology sanctions will hit Russian industry hard.

Some sanctions will have almost immediate effect. Take microchips, the Russia’s Achilles heel for decades. Despite all the country’s efforts — the Soviet Union even built a city for the sole purpose of solving the problem — there was never much progress. The new U.S. sanctions “impose Russia-wide restrictions on some US technologies produced in other countries including semiconductors, encryption security,” and Taiwan has already vowed to join in sanctioning Russia.

Russia’s import substitution strategy relies heavily on Taiwan: Russian Baikal computers are based on chips produced by TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company), something that is very difficult to replace — TSMC also supplies chips for AMD, Nvidia, and Qualcomm. Last fall Russia’s car manufacturing giant Avtovaz stopped production on all three assembly lines in Togliatti due to shortages in chips caused by the global crisis, but now they are facing much more serious and permanent problems.

Even where import substitution claimed some successes, like Elbrus and Baikal computers in government agencies, unexpected problems emerged. The Interior Ministry, the largest buyer of Elbruses, caused a scandal in the industry when it openly discussed getting back to Intel chips because the system that handled videos of traffic violations constantly broke down, something the Interior Ministry had never experienced with systems based on Intel. And this was before sanctions were introduced.

There are two ways out of this tough situation.

The first is to bring back the time-honored Soviet tradition of stealing Western technology. This is something the former spies in the Russian decision-making machinery will understand. The problem is that they also understand the limits of this strategy. Putin himself once remarked that technological espionage was useless in the Soviet Union because Soviet industry couldn’t incorporate the stolen technologies.

Russian spies trying to penetrate foreign tech companies has been an open secret for some time: it is one of the reasons why many U.S. software and hardware corporations that had teams of engineers in Russia started moving them quietly elsewhere a couple of years ago. They simply don’t want the local staff to be targeted for recruitment by the secret services. Now this migration of Russian engineers will definitely accelerate.

The second way to make up for shortages in tech is, obviously, to turn to China. For a long time the FSB was paranoid about letting the Chinese into Russian communications, but in desperate times there is no room for such misgivings. Russia is simply not in position to choose – and the Chinese will exploit it to the full.

That will effectively be the end of the Russian digital sovereignty project, the battle cry of Russian officials and diplomats for so many years.

Russia is apparently doomed to go the way of stolen technologies and technologies provided by the Chinese. This is not a bright future for a country that has been proud of having local online services compete successfully with global platforms.
 

CunningCanuk

Well-Known Member
i don't like him worth a fuck, but he is in the proper forum, they closed down sedan because after multiple warnings that politics belonged in this forum, they still talked about politics in the growers area...you can't ban someone for having offensive ideas, only for using offensive language, or making threats...that's what separates us from them to begin with
Agreed, it’s not like he’s doing very well. Consider it politics with a side of mashed potatoes.
 

Sativied

Well-Known Member
You are obviously a German hater, which is evident by your constant swipes into that direction, which are uncalled for and reveal your nationalist BS attitude.
25 years ago I drove monthly to Holland, one of my friends in Groeningen told me how hated germans are over there. He cited a report in ur national TV that enquired about this form of discriminatory resentment.

I could as well elaborate on ur notority having to rely on atomic power - it is NOT a Green idea, nothing is 100% safe forever. Not even the super-techically Japanese could pull that off. Given how long radiation persists and we already had 2 major catastrophy's in a only a few decades, how can you downplay that in such an infantile way?

Seriously the Greens in Netherlands have atomics ob their agenda?!? Ur most likely a conservative, otherwise it's unfathomly to me how u can dismiss so many greed side-aspects.

You basically only seem to care about global warming because the rising sea-levels are most detrimental to ur own cause.

That said, attitudes change over times and replacing the now cold reactor cores wouldnt take too long. It wouldnt even take 20 years to build up several power plants right from scratch....

And yes, all trade is important when it comes to economically weaken an aggressor. Otherwise it's pointless... and ofc necessary items would serve ofc more to justify exceptions or do you want that things break down here critically and we hurt our own position more than them?
That’s a whole of projections and nonsense accusations to deal with your cognitive dissonance. I’m a German hater cause I criticize the widely criticized naive German ”solution” of embracing a fossile fuel as replacement of fossile fuel that needs to be sourced from Russia? For pointing out statistics? We should and have all the right to hate Germans for at least another 100 years, especially the ones that defend dumb decisions their government makes, but I’ve been to Germany many dozens of times and it’s impossible for me to hate them as a whole. I‘ve actually become quite the fan and one of those people who tell the haters the germans now are not the same as 80 years ago and are very much like us, same people, the one in the west anyway. The only one showing nationalist tendencies is you right now, not being able to deal with criticism on the nation. Thanks to Germany, such behavior is heavily frowned upon here.

Also, Kassiopeija, Greens party member who parrots AfD points:
from my point of view it is mind-boggling how much the US is willing to spend into wars, and how paranoid & aggressive you pursue your interests.
we here in Germany are heavily funding the EU, and try to empower the green revolution. this is where we really put alot of money into it. not wars, or weapons, or military. this is a primitive way to deal with problems.
we are not very rich from an individual point, the scandinavians have higher income & better social security. our quality of life & social security took a large hit as we had to care about several millions migrants caused by the stupid wars in arabia.
look at other countries when they have migrants many will hav to live on the streets, falling easy prey to become criminals. we want to prevent that so our social laws impose that the state has to give shelter - a home - to anyone living here. we also give them work. but its costly to do that so we have to cut funds elsewhere.
seriously, here in Germany we don't understand the paranoia the US has with the Russian. 20 years ago we made a deal to take german WW2 emigrants back and this cultural influx caused a mutual understanding. Most problems we have is with the Kremlin that kills political rivals & bully their neighbours. But all big militaristic states do that to some extent...
Consistency is overrated, and I too changed my mind on a few things when Putin invaded Ukraine, but you made quite a U turn if the facts I pointed out upset you to a point where your only response is imaginary nonsense about the messenger. Once you calmed down (first time I get “angry” emojis in over a decade riu lol) I’d love to discuss the issue further in a more productive manner. :peace:
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Mar 1, 2022
Russian forces are completing the reinforcement and resupply of their troops north and west of Kyiv and launching an envelopment of the capital likely aimed at encircling and ultimately capturing it. This effort will likely accelerate in the next 24-48 hours. Russian operations against Kyiv are Moscow’s main effort. Russian troops are also undertaking three supporting efforts, one to seize Kharkiv, one to take Mariupol and secure the “land bridge” connecting Rostov-on-Don to Crimea, and one to secure Kherson and set conditions for a drive west toward Mykolayiv and Odesa. The three supporting operations are active, with the operation against Mariupol making the most progress in the last 24 hours.
Source: Institute for the Study of War
https://www.understandingwar.org/...
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
China doesn't have a large navy or air force to project it's power far beyond it's shores. That's why they built all those islands to create air bases and ports in disputed waters. Problem is the chinese are not very good at building quality and those islands are now coming apart and sinking. If they invade Taiwan now they would have a hard time holding onto it with the size of their navy and air force, they can't protect their pirate fishing fleet, just sink them.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
China doesn't have a large navy or air force to project it's power far beyond it's shores. That's why they built all those islands to create air bases and ports in disputed waters. Problem is the chinese are not very good at building quality and those islands are now coming apart and sinking. If they invade Taiwan now they would have a hard time holding onto it with the size of their navy and air force, they can't protect their pirate fishing fleet, just sink them.
They are patient, have a large trading relationship with Taiwan and like most of the rest of the world gets their microchips from them. China in partnership with the west has grown economically as fast as possible and they are smart enough not to fuck up a good thing. After the Global economic reaction to Russia, China will be rethinking this whole Taiwan business and back burnering it for a more auspicious time in the future. They still wanna be the big kid on their block though.
 
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