To my most recent post about support for Ukraine. Once you perceive someone as an enemy, it is hard to change that attitude unless they do a lot to prove otherwise, works for Russia too. Many older voters grew up in the cold war and have pretty fixed ideas about Russia, ideas recently confirmed and reinforced by atrocities, and they lean republican. It is an issue that divides the republicans like no other and Biden pushing for extra funding for Ukraine fucks them over! Even if they don't really need it!JUST IN — Tucker Carlson is reportedly in discussions to interview Vladimir Putin, as reported by RT.
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Yeah but we covered that early on in this thread too, Russians are masochistic. When someone in the west says Russians are doing bad it just means something different than it does to the Russians themselves. Like setting the thermostat a few degrees higher in hell. I want to see major cracks. Fact is it hasn’t gone quickly enough and no major blows have been dealt that triggered enough to be fed up with the situation. Instead the slow decline allowed them to get accustomed to it. Easier than spoiled people in the west deal with the inflation from the pandemic and the energy crisis. And just look at Erdogan and how he affected the economy, turkish lira, and still got reelected. Should be a lesson for the future, don’t slowly introduce sanctions, hit them hard and cause an abrupt change.I think the idea is that from here on out things in the Russian economy might deteriorate quickly, Vlad just doubled the official military budget and sanctions are biting harder than ever. He is probably gonna draft another quarter million men before year's end and it will exacerbate the worker shortage and economic woes. If Rubles weren't so hard on the ass, they might be useful for toilet paper one day and must be starting to cost more than it is worth minting a one ruble note or coin.
Sanctions should disproportionally affect the Russians because they imported almost all their modern technology and infrastructure from the west, bought with oil money. Their own manufacturing economy withered away under the weight of corruption, and they are a bit like some oil rich middle east kingdom. When shit breaks down like their auto fleet parts will be not just hard to get, but expensive and they need imported parts for everything from elevators to railroads, they can't even make their own roller bearings for train wagons, and they wear out too.Yeah but we covered that early on in this thread too, Russians are masochistic. When someone in the west says Russians are doing bad it just means something different than it does to the Russians themselves. Like setting the thermostat a few degrees higher in hell. I want to see major cracks. Fact is it hasn’t gone quickly enough and no major blows have been dealt that triggered enough to be fed up with the situation. Instead the slow decline allowed them to get accustomed to it. Easier than spoiled people in the west deal with the inflation from the pandemic and the energy crisis. And just look at Erdogan and how he affected the economy, turkish lira, and still got reelected. Should be a lesson for the future, don’t slowly introduce sanctions, hit them hard and cause an abrupt change.
So many percentages in this article, so much effort…
Yes, the sanctions against Russia are working
HR/VP Blog - Since the start of the invasion of Ukraine, the EU has imposed 11 rounds of ever-tighter sanctions against Russia. Some people claim these sanctions have not worked. This is simply not true. Within a year, they have already limited Moscow’s options considerably causing financial...www.eeas.europa.eu
“And the outlook for 2023 remains bleak. According to the latest OECD report, Russia’s GDP is foreseen to shrink by up to 2.5%.”
What they don’t mentioned is that -2.5% is a worst case scenario prediction and it’s expected the Russian economy might grow similar to the EU zone or at contract with a similar negligible amount. Nor do they include positive predictions for the years to follow. The fact they mislead using the lowest end of the prediction should tell you something. Just as the media referring to the ruble as plummeting. If there were major cracks to point out there’d be no need for such disingenuous cherry picking.
Russia overtakes Germany to become fifth biggest economy in the world in GDP on a PPP basis
The late US Senator John McCain once called Russia a “gas station masquerading as a country” and the fact that Russia’s nominal GDP is about ...intellinews.com
It’s partly a matter of perspective but dictating perspective is standard mo for Russia.
Why do we not sanction tf out of China? Plenty of good reasons, legally, morally. Yet we don‘t because we supposedly can’t do with China’s manufacturers and cheap disposable clothing. The excuse the US and EU uses. We can’t manufacture all the ‘stuff’ we want ourselves so we‘ll just have to tolerate millions in camps, slavery, and China not taking a strong stance against Russia. That’s what Ukraine is dealing with. Allies who care too much about themselves and keeping their hands clean, and enemies who have no fucks to give.
Russia is losing and perhaps on the ropes when their proxies and useful idiots start pleading for peace. They are attacking Ukraine in the north, desperately trying to distract from what is happening down south. The Ukrainians are learning as they go and getting more efficient at penetrating the Russian defenses.
The fictional line the west has placed conveniently in a position it suits them economically rather than the Uyghurs and the Ukrainians physically. My whole point is we’re letting this happen, and in that context China is by far the worst offender. Just like the US they have a responsibility to use their power, anything else means they are complicit. Yep, it’s like that. One planet, can’t have large powerful nations contributing to the demise of the planet and continue to give them that power as that means indirectly still being complicit. Good swimmers who let someone drown should be charged with murder.China hasn't crossed the line yet
That completely ignores the point I made while I had such a good analogy . It leads mostly to first world problems from the American consumer in the capitalist west perspective. They’re self-sustainable in food, energy and vodka.Sanctions should disproportionally affect the Russians because they imported almost all their modern technology and infrastructure from the west, bought with oil money. Their own manufacturing economy withered away under the weight of corruption, and they are a bit like some oil rich middle east kingdom. When shit breaks down like their auto fleet parts will be not just hard to get, but expensive and they need imported parts for everything from elevators to railroads, they can't even make their own roller bearings for train wagons, and they wear out too.
America can no more help the Uyghurs than the UK could help the poles squeezed between Hitler and Stalin. Trade is good and raises everybody's standard of living and quality of life, it is the first thing attacked in war for a reason. The average Russian lives like shit and makes a fraction of what people make in the west, but most of the population is urban and a million of their brightest left the country over the war or Putin. They are also more connected with smartphones and telegram, aside from the state propaganda that few really believe, none the less they are patriots and imperialists too for the most part.'Dying by the dozens every day' - Ukraine losses climb
Ukraine will not disclose its death count, but the BBC’s Quentin Sommerville witnesses the mounting toll.www.bbc.com
I don’t believe we don’t have the means to stop this. What remains then is that it’s a choice, between ending the war and how much we’re willing to risk/sacrifice. History is not going to look kindly on us. But we’ll send F16s… ~8 months too late...
The fictional line the west has placed conveniently in a position it suits them economically rather than the Uyghurs and the Ukrainians physically. My whole point is we’re letting this happen, and in that context China is by far the worst offender. Just like the US they have a responsibility to use their power, anything else means they are complicit. Yep, it’s like that. One planet, can’t have large powerful nations contributing to the demise of the planet and continue to give them that power as that means indirectly still being complicit. Good swimmers who let someone drown should be charged with murder.
That completely ignores the point I made while I had such a good analogy . It leads mostly to first world problems from the American consumer in the capitalist west perspective. They’re self-sustainable in food, energy and vodka.
Голь на выдумку хитра - Russian proverb: poor people are crafty. They’ll go Cuban on their cars while the west complains about the cost or duration of charging an EV.
Oh not this again.Europe is still gonna need gas for industry at least and for back up grid power, beats coal. Ukraine has lots of gas and just found more. You don't look for it if you aren't planning on selling it and conditions for doing that have been looking favorable for a while now. If Ukraine ends up selling gas, petroleum and other resources to the EU, it will be a long time before they even consider Russia. Ukraine is right on the border of the EU really close and tapping into the existing pipeline infrastructure should be easy. The demand for NG will dwindle over the next decade, particularly for domestic use, so there should be plenty in Ukraine to meet the needs of the EU and others. Europe would have the added benefit of the money they spend on Ukrainian energy will also contribute to their defense by making Ukraine strong, win, win.
I disagree, the economic relations provide enough leverage and makes it a completely different situation you compare it to. History agrees with me, it's possible to stop a powerful country from putting millions in to camps. The difference isn't the price we'd have to pay, but the difference in pricing we're willing to pay.America can no more help the Uyghurs than the UK could help the poles squeezed between Hitler and Stalin.
I don't think the Ukrainians are losing nearly as many men as the Russians, 5 to one or more I think for a variety of reasons. If Biden and other major allies hatched a plan to suck Russia in by appearing to respond to their threats and make them commit everything, then they could destroy Russian military power and their ability to threaten Europe or their weaker neighbors. We are talking long term security here and suppose the Ukrainians or some of them reluctantly agree that this is the only real long-term security for Ukraine but complain as they should! The Ukrainian government can blame the way the war was fought on the allies using the theory you outlined, and it would not be their fault, they can blame the allies and that's ok. I believe there will be a catastrophic defeat for Russia long before the F16s show up, they are more to keep them out. I expect Crimea and the south of Ukraine to be cut off by fall, at least the rail links will be severed in the south of Ukraine and at Kerch. If they don't have Crimea by the time the F-16 arrive, then they will use them to bomb the shit out of the place until the Russians leave and bomb them getting away too.I don’t believe we don’t have the means to stop this. What remains then is that it’s a choice, between ending the war and how much we’re willing to risk/sacrifice. History is not going to look kindly on us. But we’ll send F16s… ~8 months too late...
A cynic might say that China made many more Westerners billionaires than Russia.… Why do we not sanction tf out of China?
America isn't perfect and neither are other countries that trade with China, the severe suppression of minorities is getting progressively worse and now encompasses the Cantonese. I have my own bone to pick with China over Tibet and I'm aware of the reasons too. Most of the world's advanced microchips are made in Taiwan and everybody has a vital national interest there, that is the main difference, self-interest.I disagree, the economic relations provide enough leverage and makes it a completely different situation you compare it to. History agrees with me, it's possible to stop a powerful country from putting millions in to camps. The difference isn't the price we'd have to pay, but the difference in pricing we're willing to pay.